FTR-305 The Bormann
Organization
(Two 30-minute segments) (Sources are noted in parentheses.) (Recorded in June
of 1997.)
Originally
recorded in June of 1997, this program sets forth the basic facts concerning
the genesis and functioning of the remarkable and deadly Bormann organization,
named for Reichsleiter Martin Bormann. (Note that FTR#’s 273, 278, 332, 370 document the
profound connections of the Bush family and administration of George W. Bush to
the Bormann organization.)
1.
The economic and political component of a Third Reich gone underground,
the Bormann organization controls corporate Germany and much of the rest of the
world. [It was created and run by Martin Bormann, the organizational genius who
was the "the power behind the throne" in Nazi Germany.] The Bormann
group is a primary element of the analysis presented in the For the Record programs. For more about
the Bormann organization, see: FTR #’s
87, 90, 99, 102, 120, 122, 123, 125, 127, 134, 145, 152, 155, 158, 177, 179,
180, 187, 189, 193, 194, 195, 200, 215, 216, 218, 219, 224, 226, 232, 233, 234,
235, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 245, 248, 250, 251, 261, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276,
278, 283, 286, 292, 293, 294, 298, 299, 300, 302, 303, 309, 370.)
2.
The broadcast begins with discussion of the resumption of long-dormant
investigations of the Nazi money trail created as the Third Reich siphoned off
its wealth, in an effort to politically survive the inevitability of military
defeat. ("Nazi Money Trail Heats Up
after 50 Years" by Greg Steinmetz; Wall Street Journal; 4/28/97; p.
A1.)
3.
As noted in this article, much of the Nazi money was reinvested in
German corporations. (Idem.)
4.
Although it is not mentioned directly in this article, the story of the
Nazi money trail leads, inevitably to the Bormann organization. The purpose of
the Bormann flight capital program was set forth by Paul Manning, the heroic
author who wrote the story of the Bormann organization. "Martin Bormann, forty-one at the fall
of Berlin, and strong as a bull, was at all times at Hitler’s side, impassive
and cool. His be-all and end-all was to guide Hitler, and now to make the
decisions that would lead to the eventual rebirth of his country. Hitler; his
intuitions at peak level despite his crumbling physical and mental health in
the last year of the Third Reich, realized this and approved of it. ‘Bury your
treasure,’ he advised Bormann, ‘for you
will need it to begin a Fourth Reich.’ [Italics are mine.] That is
precisely what Bormann was about when he set in motion the ‘flight capital’ scheme
August 10, 1944, in Strasbourg. The treasure, the golden ring, he envisioned
for the new Germany was the sophisticated distribution of national and
corporate assets to safe havens throughout the neutral nations of the rest of
the world." (Martin
Bormann: Nazi in Exile; Paul Manning; Copyright 1981 [HC]; Lyle Stuart
Inc.; ISBN 0-8184-0309-8; pp. 29-30.)
5.
The program describes the Strasbourg meeting in detail. “The Staff car had
left Colmar at first light for Strasbourg, carrying SS Obergruppenfueherer Scheid,
who held the rank of lieutenant general in the Waffen SS, as well as the title
of Dr. Scheid, director of the industrial firm of Hermadorff & Schenburg
Company. While the beauty of the rolling countryside was not lost on Dr.
Scheid, his thoughts were on the meeting of important German businessmen to
take place on his arrival at the Hotel Maison Rouge in Strasbourg. Reichsleiter Martin Bormann himself had
ordered the conference, and although he would not physically be present he had
confided to Dr. Scheid, who was to preside, ‘The steps to be taken as a result
of this meeting will determine the postwar future of Germany.’ The
Reishsleiter had added, ‘German industry must realize that the war cannot now
be won, and must take steps to prepare for a postwar commercial campaign which
will in time insure the economic resurgence of Germany.’ It was August 10,
1944. The Mercedes-Benz bearing SS Obergruppenfuerher Scheid moved slowly now
through the narrow streets of Strasbourg. Dr. Scheid noticed that this was a
most agreeable city, one to return to after the war.” (Ibid.; pp.
23-24.)
6.
The meeting was crafted by Bormann and presided over by SS lieutenant
general Dr. Scheid. (Ibid.; p. 23.)
7.
“The staff car
drew up before the Hotel Maison Rouge on the Rue des France-Bourgeois. Dr.
Scheid, briefcase in hand, entered the lobby and ascended in the elevator to
the conference suite reserved for his meeting. Methodically he circled the
room, greeting each of the twelve present, then took his place at the head of
the conference table. Even the pads and pencils before each man had been
checked; Waffen SS technicians had swept the entire room, inspecting for hidden
microphones and miniature transmitters. As an additional precaution, all suites
flanking the conference suite had been held unfilled, as had the floors above
and below, out of bounds for the day. Lunch was to be served in the conference
suite by trusted Waffen SS stewards. Those present, all thirteen of them, could
be assured that the thorough precautions would safeguard them all, even the
secretary who was to take the minutes, later to be typed with a copy sent by SS
courier to Bormann.” (Ibid.; p. 24.)
8.
“A transcript of that meeting is in my possession. It is a
captured German document from the files of the U.S. Treasury Department, and
states who was present and what was said, as the economy of the Third Reich was
projected onto a postwar profit seeking track.” (Ibid.;
p.24.)
9.
“Present were
Dr. Kaspar representing Krupp, Dr. Tolle representing Rochling, Dr. Sinceren representing
Messerschmitt, Drs. Kopp, Vier, and Beerwanger representing Rheinmetall,
Captain Haberkorn and Dr. Ruhe representing Bussing, Drs. Ellenmayer and Kardos
representing Volkswagenwerk, engineers Drose, Yanchew, and Koppshem
representing various factories in Posen, Poland (Drose, Yanchew, & Co.,
Brown-Boveri, Herkuleswerke, Buschwerke, and Stadtwerke); Dr. Meyer, an
official of the German Naval Ministry in Paris; and Dr. Strossner of the
Ministry of Armament, Paris.” (Ibid.; p. 25.)
10.
Scheid briefed the leaders of
German industry on Bormann’s plan, and gave them contacts—many of them in New
York. “Dr.
Scheid, papers from his briefcase arranged neatly on the table before him,
stated that all industrial materiel in France was to be evacuated to Germany
immediately. ‘The battle of France is lost to Germany,’ he admitted, quoting
Reichsleiter Bormann as his authority, ‘and now the defense of the Siegfried
Line (and Germany itself) is the main problem. . . . From now on, Germany
industry must take steps in preparation for a postwar commercial campaign, with
each industrial firm making new contacts and alliances with foreign firms. This
must be done individually and without attracting any suspicion. However, the
party and the Third Reich will stand behind every firm with permissive and
financial support.’ He assured those present that the frightening law of 1933
known as Treason Against the Nation, which mandated the death penalty for
violation of foreign exchange regulations or concealing of foreign currency,
was now null and void, on direct order of Reichsleiter Bormann.” (Ibid.;
p. 25.)
11.
One of the firms that he cited as an example of a company that had been
particularly useful to Germany was the Hamburg-Amerika Line. As discussed in FTR#’s 273, 346, the Hamburg-Amerika Line was part of the Bush family’s
business operations on behalf of the Third Reich. “Dr. Scheid also affirmed, ‘The ground must
now be laid on the financial level for borrowing considerable sums from foreign
countries after the war.’ As an example of the kind of support that had been
most useful to Germany in the past, Dr. Scheid cited the fact that ‘patents for
stainless steel belonged to the Chemical Foundation, Inc. New York, and the
Krupp Company of Germany, jointly, and that of the United States Steel
Corporation, Carnegie, Illinois, American Steel & Wire, National Tube,
etc., were thereby under an obligation to work with the Krupp concern.’ He also
cited the Zeiss Company, the Leica Company, and the Hamburg-Amerika line as
typical firms that had been especially effective in protecting German interests
abroad. He gave New York addresses to the twelve men.” (Idem.)
Hamburg-Amerika Line’s operations in the U.S. were controlled by the
grandfather and great grandfather of George W. Bush. (See—among other programs—FTR#’s 248, 273, 370.)
12.
The group also discussed provisions to continue to fund the Nazi party
in an underground fashion after the war. “A smaller conference in the afternoon was presided over
by Dr. Bosse of the German Armaments Ministry. It was attended only by
representatives of Hecko, Krupp, and Rochling. Dr. Bosse restated Bormann’s
belief that the war was all but lost, but that it would be continued by Germany
until certain goals to insure the economic resurgence of Germany after the war
had been achieved. He added that German industrialists must be prepared to
finance the continuation of the Nazi Party, which would be forced to go
underground, just as had the Maquis in France.” (Ibid.; p.26.)
13.
“From this day,
German industrial firms of all rank were to begin placing their funds—and,
wherever possible, key manpower—abroad, especially in neutral countries. Dr.
Bosse advised that ‘two main banks can be used for the export of funds for
firms who have made no prior arrangements; the Basler Handelsbank and
Schweizerische Kreditanstalt of Zurich.’ He also stated, ‘There are a number of
agencies in Switzerland which for a five percent commission will buy property
in Switzerland for German firms, using Swiss cloaks.’” Ibid.; p. 27.)
14.
“Dr. Bosse
closed the meeting, observing that ‘after the defeat of Germany, the Nazi Party
recognizes that certain of its best known leaders will be condemned as war
criminals. However, in cooperation with the industrialists, it is arranging to
place its less conspicuous but most important members with various German
factories as technical experts or members of its research and designing
offices.” (Idem.)
15.
Bormann set up 750 corporations in neutral countries, and these became
repositories for the liquid wealth of the Third Reich. Overseas subsidiaries of
key German corporations were also central to the realization of the Bormann
assets. “The
movement of German assets into Switzerland had also gone well, Bormann noted
from his reports. Flight capital investments had been accomplished principally
through the establishment of subsidiaries of powerful German firms. Over half
of the total German capital in Switzerland was used in setting up holding
companies representing I.G. Farben, Merck, Siemens, Osram, Henkel, and others.
A holding company may not trade in any form. It may only hold stock in other
companies, but through this device the existing German firms, and the 750 new
corporations established under the Bormann program, gave themselves absolute
control over a postwar economic network of viable, prosperous companies that
stretched from the Ruhr to the ‘neutrals’ of Europe and to the countries of
South America; a control that continues today and is easily maintained through
the bearer bonds or shares issued by these corporations to cloak for real
ownership. Bearer shares require no registration of identity, for such shares
are exactly what they mean; the bearer of the majority shares controls the
company without needing a vestige of proof as to how he acquired them. Thus the
Germans who participated as a silent force in Bormann’s postwar commercial
campaign—which is sometimes referred to by aging nazis as ‘Operation Eagle’s
Flight’ or ‘Aktion Adlerflug’-insured their command over the industrial and
financial institutions that were to move the new Federal Republic of Germany
back into the forefront of world economic leadership.” (Ibid.; pp.
134-135.)
16.
“Seven hundred
and fifty new corporations were established in the last months of the war under
the direction of Reichsleiter Bormann, using the technique perfected by Hermann
Schmitz [of I.G. Farben]. A national of each country was the nominal head of
each corporate structure and the board was a mix of German administrators and
bank officials, while the staffing at senior and middle management levels was
comprised of German scientists and technicians. In the background were the
shadowy owners of the corporation, those Germans who possessed the bearer bonds
as proof of stock ownership. The establishment of such companies, usually
launched in industries requiring high technical skills was welcomed in Spain
and Argentina, to give two examples because those governments appreciated that
German companies would generate jobs and implement a more favorable balance of
trade. Country by country, a breakdown by U.S. treasury investigators of these
new 750 German firms was as follows: Portugal, 58; Spain, 112; Sweden, 233;
Switzerland, 214; Turkey, 35; Argentina, 98." (Ibid.; pp. 135-136)
17.
“In addition to
overseeing his 750 new corporations, Martin Bormann was also kept apprised of
I.G. Farben’s activities in neutral countries, as well as the intensified
activities of other major firms that were utilizing the new Bormann policy of
transferring Third Reich money to subsidiaries. Farben had eight subsidiaries
in Argentina, three in Portugal, four in Sweden, six in Switzerland, and
fourteen in Spain. A.E.G., the giant electrical equipment manufacturer had six
subsidiaries in Argentina, three affiliates in Spain, and four in Sweden. In
brief, every major German corporation with an international operation
strengthened its branches, subsidiaries, and affiliates with an influx of new
money and talent that included scientists and technicians arriving weekly ready
to perform laboratory research in Spain and Buenos Aires.” (Ibid.; p. 140.)
18.
One of the factors that permitted the realization and perpetuation of
the Bormann organization was the profound connection between the above-ground
German corporate structure, the 750 flight capital corporate fronts established
in neutral countries, and major corporate and political elements in Western
nations. (For more about the connections between American corporations and
their Axis counterparts, see also: RFA
#’s 1, 2, 10, Miscellaneous Archive Shows M-11, M-26 and M4-2, FTR #’s 29, 36-38, 87, 114, 121, 186,
219, 248.) “Powerful
friends of the Bormann organization in all Western countries, including those
sprinkled in control points throughout the administration in Washington and in
the financial and brokerage businesses of Wall Street, the City of London, and
the Paris establishment, did not wish a coordinated drive to get at these
external German assets. They had understandable reasons, if you overlook
morality: the financial benefits for cooperation (collaboration had become an
old-hat term with the war winding down) were very enticing, depending on one’s
importance and ability to be of service to the organization and the 750
corporations they were secretly manipulating, to say nothing of the known
multinationals such as I.G. Farben, Thyssen A.G., and Siemens; and, as a second
reason, the philosophy of free enterprise and preservation of private
property.” (Ibid.;. 156.)
19.
The vast international scope of the I.G. Farben firm and its various
subsidiary operations was a principal element of the Bormann organization. I.G.
Farben chief Hermann Schmitz discussed I.G.’s involvement with the Bormann
program. “In
testimony later given to Nuremberg investigators, Schmitz praised Bormann for
the way he had directed the distribution of German assets around the world. His
own Farben organization had, of course, contributed to the success of the
operation. Every regional representative working for Hermann Schmitz was an
exceptional businessman, or he would not have been with I.G. All had
contributed sound advice in their areas of competence, the regions of the world
where they represented Farben while keeping an eye on the subsidiaries of the
parent concern and the 700 hidden corporations they controlled. They had
provided assistance and continuing guidance in establishing the 750 new
companies created on order of Bormann, who wanted more than hidden assets;
Bormann wanted the money and patents and technicians put to work to create even
greater assets that would bolster Germany in the postwar years. In their
meeting in the chancellery, both men checked over the figures of sums
disbursed, and they were accurate to the pfennig.” (Ibid.; pp.
157-158.)
20.
Bormann and Schmitz then discussed I.G.’s prospects for the postwar
period. The cozy relationship with powerful elements within the power elites of
the Western allies was foreseen by Schmitz as boding well for the company’s
future. “The
Reichsleiter asked Schmitz his views of the future. Schmitz replied, ‘The
occupation armies will be understanding in the West, but certainly not in the
East. I have instructed all Farben administrators and technicians to come to
the West, where they can be of use in resuming our operations once the
disturbances of 1945 come to a halt.’ Schmitz added that, while general bomb
damage to the I.G. plants was about 25 percent of capacity, some were
untouched. He mentioned speaking with Field Marshal Model, who was commanding
the defenses of the Ruhr. ‘Model had planned to turn our Bayer-Leberkusen
pharmaceutical factory into an artillery base, but he agreed to make it an
open, undefended factory. Hopefully, we will get it back untouched.’ ‘What
about your board of directors and the essential executives? If they are held by
the occupation authorities, can I.G. continue?’ Bormann asked. ‘We can continue. We have
an operational plan for such a contingency, which everyone understands.
However, I don’t believe our board members will be detained too long. Nor will
I. But we must go through a procedure of investigation before release, so I
have been told by our N.W. 7 people who have excellent contacts in
Washington.’” (Ibid.; p. 158.) Schmitz’s predictions were relatively
accurate. Neither Schmitz nor any of the I.G. Farben executives were severely
punished and the firm’s three successor firms carried on effectively in the
postwar period. (See FTR-179.)
21.
Even the postwar perpetuation of I.G.’s poison gas-producing firms was
prepared. (Degussa, now a subsidiary of Eon, was obviously part of this nexus.)
“Schmitz also
told Bormann of his visit to Switzerland earlier in the month. ‘Germany will
have a poor image problem this time. Much worse than after the First World War.
It can all be placed on the doorsteps of Goering, Himmler, and Heydrich.
Goering and Himmler thought up the Final Solution for the Jews, and Heydrich
made it a fact.’ Bormann agreed, asking, ‘How does that affect I.G.?’ ‘We
produced the poison gas on Himmler’s orders,’ Schmitz explained, ‘so I’ve been
making some corporate name changes in Basel, which may help our overseas
situation.’” (Ibid.; p. 159.)
22.
The Manning text highlights the pivotal role of the Bormann
organization in German heavy industry and, in turn, the influence of the
Hermann Schmitz trust in the Bormann organization. “The Bormann organization continues to wield
enormous economic influence. Wealth continues to flow into the treasuries of
its corporate entitities in South America, the United States, and Europe.
Vastly diversified, it is said to be the largest land-owner in South America,
and through stockholdings, controls German heavy industry and the trust
established by the late Hermann Schmitz, former president of I.G. Farben, who held as much stock in Standard Oil of
New Jersey as did the Rockefellers.” (Ibid.; p. 292.) The
relationship between the Bormann organization, Degussa and Eon is one to be
carefully considered. (Recorded on 4/15/2001.)
23.
Bormann made a point of maintaining investment in blue-chip American
corporations. “With
such funds accumulating rapidly in Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland, and
Argentina, Bormann and his group, who were handling the fortunes of 750 new
corporations, would use these corporations in neutral countries as cloaks for
investing in American companies. Bormann always had a high regard for U.S. blue
chip stocks as a stable investment consistently purchasing a vast number of
shares from the European offices of such New York stock brokerage houses as
Merrill, Lynch on behalf of the Reich chancellery and Hitler, until war became
official between the United States and Germany and the buying stopped, for a
time.” (Ibid.; p. 138.)
24.
“In 1941,
investments in U.S. corporations by German companies and assorted German
individuals held voting ownership in 170; minority ownership was held in
another 108 American companies. These businesses covered the following fields:
manufacturing, foodstuffs, chemicals, electrical and automobile equipment,
machinery and machine equipment, other metal products); petroleum production,
refining and distribution; finance; trade; and miscellaneous.” (Ibid.; pp. 138-139.)
25.
“American
industry, of course, had a financial stake in German industry. In the same
year, 1941, 171 U.S. corporations had major investments in German firms
amounting to $420 million. A listing of these corporations is identical to the
general categories under German ownership in the United States.” (Ibid.; p. 139.)
26.
“When Bormann
gave the order for his representatives to resume purchases of American
corporate stocks, it was usually done through the neutral countries of
Switzerland and Argentina. From foreign exchange funds on deposit in Swiss
banks and in Deutsche Sudamerikanishe Bank, the Buenos Aires branch of Deutsche
Bank, large demand deposits were placed in the principal money-center banks of
New York City; National City (now Citibank), Chase (now Chase Manhattan N.A.),
Manufacturers and Hanover (now manufacturers Hanover Trust), Morgan Guaranty,
and Irving Trust. Such deposits are interest-free and the banks can invest this
money as they wish, thus turning tidy profits for themselves. In return, they
provide reasonable services such as the purchase of stocks and transfer or
payment of money on demand by customers of Deutsche bank such as
representatives of the Bormann business organizations and and Martin Bormann himself, who has demand
accounts in three New York City banks. They continue to do so. The German
investment in American corporations from these sources exceeded $5 billion and
made the Bormann economic structure a web of power and influence. The two
German-owned banks of Spain, Banco Aleman Transatlantico (now named Banco
Comercial Transatlantico), and Banco Germanico de la America del Sur, S.A., a
subsidiary of Deutsche Bank served to channel German money from Spain to South
America, where further investments were made.” (Ibid.; p. 139.)
27.
Among the many countries that figured in an important way in the
Bormann structure was Argentina. “Argentina was the mecca for such money in the Western
Hemisphere, and when Bormann gave the go-ahead in his overall flight capital
program after the decisions at Strasbourg, over $6 billion of this money flowed
into Buenos Aires for investment there and elsewhere in Latin America. The
investments covered factories, hotels, resorts, cattle, banks, land, sugar and
coffee plantations, metallurgy, insurance, electrical products, construction,
and communications. It as much the same investment spectrum as established in
Spain. West German investments today account for nearly 45 percent of all
foreign investments in Spain.” (Ibid.; pp. 139-140.)
28.
French financial institutions were central to the Bormann plan. “Before D-day
four Paris banks, Worms et Cie., Banque de Paris et de Pays-Bas, Banque de
l’Indochine (now with ‘et de Suez’ added to its name), and Banque Nationale
pour le Commerce et l’Industrie (now Banque Nationale de Paris), were used by
Bormann to siphon NSDAP and other German money in France to their bank branches
in the colonies, where it was safeguarded and invested for its German
ownership.” (Ibid.; p. 140.)
29.
As discussed in FTR#372,
there were strong connections between French industrialists and their German
counterparts, a structural relationship that contributed to and facilitated
political cooperation during the Occupation. “In the years before the war, the German
businessmen, industrialists, and bankers had established close ties with their
counterparts in France. After the blitzkrieg and invasion, the same Frenchmen
in many cases went on working with their German peers. They didn’t have much
choice, to be sure, and the occupation being instituted, very few in the high
echelons of commerce and finance failed to collaborate. The Third Republic’s
business elite was virtually unchanged after 1940 . . . They regarded the war
and Hitler as an unfortunate diversion from their chief mission of preventing a
communist revolution in France. Antibolshevism was a common denominator linking
these Frenchmen to Germans, and it accounted for a volunteer French division on
the Eastern Front. . .The upper-class men who had been superbly trained in
finance and administration at one of the two grand corps schools were referred to as France’s permanent ‘wall of
money,’ and as professionals they came into their own in 1940. They agreed to
the establishment of German subsidiary firms in France and permitted a general
buy-in to French companies.” Ibid.; 70-71.)
30.
The German economic control of the French economy proceeded smoothly
into the postwar period. “Society’s natural survivors, French version, who had served
the Third Reich as an extension of German industry, would continue to do so in
the period of postwar trials, just as they had survived the war, occupation,
and liberation. These were many of the French elite, the well-born, the
propertied, the titled, the experts, industrialists, businessmen, bureaucrats,
bankers. . . .Economic collaboration in France with the Germans had been so
widespread (on all levels of society) that there had to be a realization that
an entire nation could not be brought to trial. Only a few years before, there
had been many a sincere and well-meaning Frenchman—as in Belgium, England, and
throughout Europe - who believed National Socialism to be the wave of the
future, indeed, the only hope for curing the many desperate social, political,
and economic ills of the time. France, along with other occupied countries, did
contribute volunteers for the fight against Russia. Then there were many other
Frenchmen, the majority, who resignedly felt there was no way the Germans could
be pushed back across the Rhine." (Ibid.; p. 30.)
31.
Long after the war, the Bormann organization continued to wield
effective control of the French economy, utilizing the corporate relationships
developed before and during the occupation. “The characteristic secrecy surrounding the
actions of German industrialists and bankers during the final nine months of
the war, when Bormann’s flight capital program held their complete attention,
was also carried over into the postwar years, when they began pulling back the
skeins of economic wealth and power that stretched out to neutral nations of
the world and to formerly occupied lands. There was a suggestion of this in
France. Flora Lewis, writing from Paris in the New York Times of August 28, 1972, told of her conversation with a
French publisher: ‘It would not be possible to trace ownership of corporations
and the power structure as in the United States. ‘They’ would not permit it.
‘They’ would find a way to hound and torture anyone who tried,’ commented the
publisher. ‘They’ seem to be a fairly small group of people who know each
other, but many are not at all known to the public. ‘They’ move in and out of
government jobs, but public service apparently serves to win private promotion
rather than the other way around. The Government ‘control’ that practically
everyone mentions cannot be traced through stock holdings, regulatory agencies,
public decisions. It seems to function through a maze of personal contacts and
tacit understandings.’ The understandings arrived at in the power structure of
France reach back to prewar days, were continued during the occupation, and
have carried over to the present time. Lewis, in her report from Paris,
commented further: ‘This hidden control of government and corporations has
produced a general unease in Paris.’ Along with the unease, the fact that
France has lingering and serious social and political ailments is a residue of
World War II and of an economic
occupation that was never really terminated with the withdrawal of German
troops beyond the Rhine. It was this special economic relationship between
German and French industrialists that made it possible for Friedrich Flick to
arrange with the De-Wendel steel firm in France for purchase of his shares in
his Ruhr coal combine for $45 million, which was to start him once more on the
road back to wealth and power, after years in prison following his conviction
at Nuremberg. West Germany’s economic power structure is fueled by a two-tier
system: the corporations and individuals who publicly represent the products
that are common household names around the world, and the secretive groups
operating in the background as holding companies and who pull the threads of
power in overseas corporations established during the Bormann tenure in the
Third Reich. As explained to me, ‘These threads are like the strands of a
spider’s web and no one knows where they lead - except the inner circle of the
Bormann organization in South America.’" (Ibid.;
pp. 271-272.)
32.
Bormann’s FBI file revealed
that he had been banking under his own name in New York for some time. "The file
revealed that he had been banking under his own name from his office in Germany
in Deutsche Bank of Buenos Aires since 1941; that he held one joint account
with the Argentinian dictator Juan Peron, and on August 4, 5 and 14, 1967, had
written checks on demand accounts in first National City Bank (Overseas
Division) of New York, The Chase Manhattan Bank, and Manufacturers Hanover
Trust Co., all cleared through Deutsche Bank of Buenos Aires."
(Ibid.; p. 205.)
33.
The broadcast sets forth numerous aspects of the Bormann group’s
operations and power. These include:
Gestapo chief Heinrich Muller’s role as security director for the Bormann group
(FTR-283); the close and thorough
surveillance that Muller maintained on Manning while he was writing the book (FTR-283); Manning’s unsuccessful direct
negotiations with the Bormann group in an effort to gain an interview with
Bormann (FTR-283); German spy chief
Reinhard Gehlen’s professional relationship with Muller (FTR-283); Muller’s working relationship with the CIA (FTR-283); the Bormann group’s enormous
influence in Israel (FTR-294); the
organization’s use of Jewish businessmen (FTR-294,
397.).
26. Manning
relates his direct negotiations with the Bormann leadership group and its
security director Heinrich Mueller, the former head of the Gestapo. In addition
to attempting to secure a videotaped interview with Bormann, Manning was
negotiating to secure documents from the organization itself. “During years of
research for this book, I have become aware of Heinrich Mueller and his
security force, which provides protection for the leadership in Latin America
and wherever else they may travel to Europe and to the United States to check
on investments and profits. Through intermediaries, I have attempted
unceasingly to penetrate to the central core of the organization in South
America, but have been denied access. At the last meeting that I know about, it
was voted: ‘Herr Manning’s writing would focus undue attention on our
activities and his request must once again be denied.’ The elderly leaders,
including Reichminister Bormann, who is now eighty, wanted me on the scene to
write of their side of the story, above all his story, of one of the most
amazing and successful financial and industrial cloaking actions in history, of
which he is justifiably proud. I had sent word to Bormann that the true story,
his firsthand account, should become a matter of historical record, and stated
that I would be agreeable to writing it if I could tell his true story, warts
and all.” (Ibid.; p. 272.)
27. “Back came the word: ‘You are a free
world journalist, and can write as you think best. We, too, are interested only
in truth.’ They agreed to my request to bring along a three-man camera crew
from CBS News to film my conversations with Martin Bormann, and even approved
my wish for at least a personal thumbprint of the former Reichsleiter and party
minister, which would be positive proof of his identity. At the organization’s
request, I sent the background, names, photos and credentials of the particular
CBS cameramen: Lawrence Walter Pierce, Richard Henry Perez, and Oden Lester
Kitzmiller, an award-winning camera crew (which got the exclusive film coverage
of the attempted assassination of Governor George Wallace when he was running
for president).” (Ibid.; pp. 272-3.)
28. The
younger members of the organization vetoed this effort. “I am sorry to say that the younger leaders ,
the ones now in virtual command, voted ‘No.’ They did agree, however that 232
historical documents from World War II, which Bormann had had shipped out of
Berlin in the waning days of the war, and which are stored in his archives in
South America, could be sent to me anonymously, to be published. They said
their lengthy investigation of me had produced confidence that I was an objective
journalist, as well as a brave one, for their probing stretched back to World
War II days, and up to the present.” (Ibid.;
p. 273.)
29. “Heinrich Mueller, now seventy-nine
years old, who also serves as keeper of these archives as well as chief of all
security for the NSDAP, rejected this decision: when the courier reached the
Buenos Aires international airport bearing these documents for me he was
relieved of them by the Argentine secret police acting under an initiative from
Mueller.” (Idem.)
30.
“As Mueller had
explained previously, he had nothing against me personally; I had been cleared
of any ‘strange connections’ by his agents in New York City, whose surveillance
efforts were supplemented by the old pros of the Gestapo, up from South America
to assist in watching me. This continued intermittently for years, and efforts
were stepped up in response to the intensity of my investigations. The
statement I had originally made to their representatives in West Germany, that
I was only a diligent journalist trying to dig out an important story, finally
proved satisfactory to them. I observed that Mueller hadn’t lost his touch in
the field of surveillance, judging by the quality, skill, and number of men and
women who tracked me, at what must have been enormous cost, wherever I went in
New York City, Washington, and overseas.” (Idem.)
31.
Mueller didn’t restrict his security activities on behalf of the
Bormann group to surveillance. “Israeli agents who move
too closely to these centers of power are eliminated. One such termination was
Fritz Bauer, formerly attorney general for the State of Hesse in Frankfurt, a
survivor of Auschwitz and the man who tipped off the Israeli Mossad about the
presence of Adolf Eichmann in Buenos Aires, who was killed on orders of General
Mueller. . . .Mueller’s ruthlessness even today is what deters Artur Axmann
from altering his testimony that he saw Bormann lying dead on the roadway the
night of their escape from the Fuehrerbunker, May 1-2, 1945. . . .To this day,
Axmann, the only so-called living witness to the ‘death’ of Bormann in Berlin,
knows his life is in jeopardy if he reverses himself. General Mueller is
thorough and has a long memory, and for a Nazi such as Axmann to go against
Mueller’s original directive would make him a traitor; retribution would surely
follow.” (Ibid.; pp. 289-90.)
32.
Bormann’s business operations have included Jewish participants as a
matter of strategic intent. In turn, this has given the Bormann organization
considerable influence in Israel. “Since the founding of Israel, the Federal Republic of
Germany had paid out 85.3 billion marks, by the end of 1977, to survivors of
the Holocaust. East Germany ignores any such liability. From South America,
where payment must be made with subtlety, the Bormann organization has made a
substantial contribution. It has drawn many of the brightest Jewish businessmen
into a participatory role in the development of many of its corporations, and
many of these Jews share their prosperity most generously with Israel. If their
proposals are sound, they are even provided with a specially dispensed venture
capital fund. I spoke with one Jewish businessman in Hartford, Connecticut. He
had arrived there quite unknown several years before our conversation, but with
Bormann money as his leverage. Today he is more than a millionaire, a quiet
leader in the community with a certain share of his profits earmarked, as
always, for his venture capital benefactors. This has taken place in many other
instances across America and demonstrates how Bormann’s people operate in the
contemporary commercial world, in contrast to the fanciful nonsense with which
Nazis are described in so much ‘literature.’ So much emphasis is placed on
select Jewish participation in Bormann companies that when Adolf Eichmann was
seized and taken to Tel Aviv to stand trial, it produced a shock wave in the
Jewish and German communities of Buenos Aires. Jewish leaders informed the
Israeli authorities in no uncertain terms that this must never happen again
because a repetition would permanently rupture relations with the Germans of
Latin America, as well as with the Bormann organization, and cut off the flow
of Jewish money to Israel. It never happened again, and the pursuit of Bormann
quieted down at the request of these Jewish leaders. He is residing in an
Argentine safe haven, protected by the most efficient German infrastructure in
history as well as by all those whose prosperity depends on his well-being.
Personal invitation is the only way to reach him." (Ibid.; pp.
226-227.)
33.
The program relates an incident in which organized crime kingpin Meyer
Lansky tried to blackmail the Bormann group, which resulted in his removal from
Israel. “A
revealing insight into this international financial and industrial network was
given me by a member of the Bormann organization residing in West Germany.
Meyer Lansky, he said, the financial advisor to the Las Vegas—Miami underworld
sent a message to Bormann through my West German SS contact. Lansky promised
that if he received a piece of Bormann’s action he would keep the Israeli
agents off Bormann’s back. ‘I have a very good relation with the Israeli secret
police’ was his claim, although he was to be kicked out of Israel when his
presence became too noted—and also at the urging of Bormann’s security chief in
South America. At the time Lansky was in the penthouse suite of Jerusalem’s
King David Hotel, in which he owned stock. He had fled to Israel to evade a
U.S. federal warrant for his arrest. He sent his message to Bormann through his
bag man in Switzerland, John Pullman, also wanted in the United States on a
federal warrant. Lansky told Pullman to make this offer ‘which he can’t
refuse.’ The offer was forwarded to Buenos Aires, where it was greeted with
laughter. When the laughter died down, it was replaced with action. Meyer was
evicted from Israel and was told by Swiss authorities to stay out of their
country, so he flew to South America. There he offered any president who would
give him asylum a cool $1 million in cash. He was turned down everywhere and
had to continue his flight to Miami, where U.S. marshals, alerted, were waiting
to take him into custody.” (Ibid.;
pp. 227-228.)
34.
“The Bormann organization has the ultimate in
clout and substance, and no one can tamper with it. I have been told: ‘You
cannot push these people. If you do it can be extremely risky.’ Knowing their
heritage I take this statement at face value.” (Ibid.; p. 228.)
35.
“A former CIA contract pilot, who once flew
the run into Paraguay and Argentina to the Bormann ranch described the estate
as remote, ‘worth your life unless you entered their air space with the right
identification codes.” (Ibid.; 292.)
36.
While serving in his capacity as director of security for the Bormann
organization—the NSDAP in exile and its economic infrastructure—Mueller worked
closely with US intelligence. worked directly with U.S. intelligence, the CIA,
in particular. “The
Bormann organization had many commercial and political links to the capitals of
these three nations, and real clout was available should the chase become too
hot. The CIA could have pulled aside the gray curtain that obscured Bormann—at
any time. But the CIA and Mueller’s crack organization of former SS men found
it to their mutual advantage to cooperate in many situations. There is no
morality in the sense that most of us know it in the strange world of
professional secrecy, and when it was to the advantage of each to work together
they did so.” (Ibid.; p.211.)
37.
As might be surmised, Mueller’s operatives also worked with the
organization of Reinhard Gehlen. “Even General Gehlen, when he was chief of the Federal
Republic’s intelligence service, sent his agents to confer with General
Heinrich Mueller in South America.” (For more on Gehlen, see RFA-3, among other programs.) (Ibid.;
p. 274.)
38.
Bormann’s personal influence in
Germany proper is exemplified in the following incident. "This man, who legally succeeded Hitler
and therefore is the leader of over several million NSDAP members in south
America and Germany, demonstrated the ultimate in clout in 1971, when he
summoned the president of the Federal Republic of Germany, then Walter Scheel,
and the latter’s wife Mildred, to Bolivia, whence they quickly returned to
Europe with a newly adopted one-year-old boy who bore the first name Simon-Martin.
The child, now eleven years of age, is being reared and educated in one of
Germany’s most influential families. The belief is, of course, that he is a son
of Martin Bormann, who insisted that this child of his old age he brought up as
an upper-class German in his fatherland and receive appropriate advantages
befitting a son of the leading Nazi." (Ibid.; p. 291.)
39.
The Bormann group maintains
effective control over the German economy. "Atop an organizational pyramid that dominates the
industry of West Germany through banks, voting rights enjoyed by majority
shareholders in significant cartels, and the professional input of a relatively
young leadership group of lawyers, investment specialists, bankers, and
industrialists, he is satisfied that he achieved his aim of helping the
Fatherland back on its feet. To ensure continuity of purpose and direction, a
close watch is maintained on the profit statements and management reports of
corporations under its control elsewhere. This leadership group of twenty, which
is in fact a board of directors, is chaired by Bormann, but power has shifted
to the younger men who will carry on the initiative that grew from that
historic meeting in Strasbourg on August 10, 1944. Old Heinrich Mueller, chief
of security for the NSDAP in South America, is the most feared of all, having
the power of life and death over those deemed not to be acting in the best
interests of the organization. Some still envision a Fourth Reich. . .What will
not pass is the economic influences of the Bormann organization, whose
commercial directives are obeyed almost without question by the highest
echelons of West German finance and industry. ‘All orders come from the
shareholders in South America,’ I have been told by a spokesman for Martin
Bormann." (Ibid.; pp. 284-5.)
40.
The Bormann group’s enormous
influence has led to an effective cover-up over the years. “. . .were he to emerge, it would embarrass
the governments that assisted in his escape, the industrial and financial
leaders who benefited from his acumen and transferred their capital to neutral
nations in the closing days of World War II, and the businessmen of four
continents who profited from the 750 corporations he established throughout the
world as depositories of money, patents, bearer bonds, and shares in blue chip
industries of the United States and Europe. . . When I penetrated the silence
cloaking this story, after countless interviews and laborious research in
German and American archives for revealing documents of World War II, I knew that
the Bormann saga of flight capital and his escape to South America was really
true. It had been covered up by an unparalleled manipulation of public opinion
and the media. The closer I got to the truth, the more quiet attention I
received from the forces surrounding and protecting Martin Bormann, and also
from those who had a direct interest in halting my investigation. Over the
period of years it took to research this book, I was the object of diligent
observation by squads of Gestapo agents dispatched from South America by
General ‘Gestapo’ Mulller, who directs all security matters for Martin Bormann,
Nazi in exile, and his organization, the most remarkable business group
anywhere in the secret world of today. Mueller’s interest in me, an American
journalist, confirmed the truth of my many interviews and my ongoing
investigation. . .There are also those in international government and business
who have attempted to stop my forward movement on this investigation. In
Germany, France, England, and the United States, too many leaders in government
and finance still adhere to Winston Churchill’s statement to his Cabinet in
1943 ‘In wartime, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a
bodyguard of lies’ . . .Oddly, I encountered less resistance from Martin
Bormann and his aging peers than I did from the cover-up groups in West
Germany, Paris, London, Washington, and Wall Street." (Ibid.;
pp. 11-12.) (Recorded in June of 1997.)