A TREASURE TROVE
IN MARCH 1944, THE CRAGGY PEAKS SURROUNDING THE ANCIENT
Cathar fortress of
Montségur in southern France reverberated with the grinding gears and
revving engines of military machines. The trucks and command cars belonged
to a battalion of Nazi SS troopers led by Adolf Hitler’s top commando, SS Standartenfuehrer Otto Skorzeny.
Standing six feet and four inches, Skorzeny
was larger than life among his comrades, and his exploits during World War
II only enhanced this reputation. An old dueling scar creased his face from
the left cheekbone to his chin, earning him the nickname Scar.
Born in Vienna in 1908, Skorzeny had joined the Nazi Party in 1930 while
studying in Germany. By 1939, he had been accepted as a member of Hitler’s
personal bodyguards. Sent home from the Russian Front in 1942 due to wounds,
Skorzeny soon was directing secret agents in other countries.
But worldwide attention became focused on Skorzeny in September 1943, when
he led a glider assault by commandos on a mountaintop hotel where the
dictator Benito Mussolini was being held captive following a coup in Italy.
In a daring daylight operation, Skorzeny and his men liberated Mussolini,
who had been contemplating suicide, and whisked him off to safety. Hitler
declared Mussolini the rightful leader of Italy and the war there continued
until Germany surrendered in May 1945.
Mussolini’s ouster followed by Allied landings in Italy prompted Hitler to
send his troops into what had until then been called Vichy, France, to
ostensibly protect the “soft underbelly of Europe.” The Nazis had gained
freedom of movement in the historic Languedoc region, located in the
foothills of the Pyrenees mountains, which separate France from Spain.
But in early March 1944, something more than military victory was on
Skorzeny’s mind as his troops entered the area encompassing Montsegur and
the village of Rennes-le- Château, the site of a great mystery since the
discovery of strange documents by a young priest in 1891.
SKORZENY’S THOUGHTS UNDOUBTEDLY were centered on the location of a fabulous
treasure believed to have been located by a German author and occult
researcher named Otto Rahn.
Little is known about Rahn’s early life except that he was born February 18,
1904, in Michelstadt and educated in literature and philology at the
University of Berlin. During his time in school, Rahn had become fascinated
with legends of the Holy Grail as well as the little-understood Cathars—“pure
ones,” as they were called—who had opposed the Roman Church and thus
suffered near annihilation in a papal military campaign in 1209, known as
the Albigensian Crusade.
In the early 1930s, Rahn traveled widely in the Languedoc region of Southern
France, even spelunking among the maze of cave systems in the foothills of
the Pyrenees mountains. Here he gained firsthand knowledge about the Cathars
and their descendants, many of whom became members of the fabled Knights
Templar.
Rahn’s book Crusade Against the Grail was published in 1933, the same year
Hitler came to power. This and other books on the Cathars and Grail legends,
as well as his many travel articles, brought him to the attention of SS
chief Heinrich Himmler, who, along with many other top-ranking Nazis, had a
keen interest in occult artifacts and knowledge.
Rahn’s knowledge of both
the Cathars and the Templars apparently intrigued Himmler, as Rahn was
inducted into the SS as a lieutenant in 1936.
Himmler and his cronies must have been entranced with Rahn, who had drawn
connections between the Cathar fortress of Montségur and a fabulous cave
housing the Holy Grail called Montsavat, mentioned in Parzival by Wolfram
von Eschenbach in the thirteenth century. Rahn believed he had discovered
the final resting place of a great treasure of antiquity, which included the
Tables of Testimony, the Grail Cup known as Emerald Cup, and perhaps even
the long-lost Ark of the Covenant.
And by March 1944, the Nazis were free to move troops into Languedoc in
search of this ancient wealth, known as King Solomon’s treasure.
It was much too late for Rahn.
By 1939, Rahn had become disenchanted with
his Nazi superiors, writing,
“There is much sorrow in my country. [It is]
impossible for a tolerant, liberal man like me to live in the nation that my
native country has become.”
He resigned his commission in the SS in February
1939 and, barely a month later, reportedly died of exposure after having
been caught in a snowstorm during a hiking expedition. Rumors circulated
that he had been killed in a concentration camp. The National Socialist
ideologue Alfred Rosenberg recorded that Rahn committed suicide by taking
cyanide “for politico-mystical reasons as well as for personal ones.”
However he died, Rahn’s knowledge was retained by Himmler.
THE FABLED TREASURE of King Solomon is the greatest cache of riches known to
humankind. Its fascinating history serves as a timeline for the evolution of
Western civilization as it can be traced from ancient Mesopotamia up to
World War II.
Gold, silver, and precious gems—such as diamonds, pearls, emeralds, amber,
amethyst, topaz, sapphires, rubies, turquoise, and others— comprised this
priceless hoard of riches. But Solomon’s treasure also contained riches of
quite a different sort. It included ancient scrolls, texts, and tablets upon
which was inscribed some of the world’s most esoteric and occult knowledge.
This knowledge had been handed down for thousands of years from the time of
the world’s first recorded civilization in ancient Sumer—present- day Iraq.
Thousands of translated
Sumerian tablets along with their inscribed cylinder
seals are now available and they tell of astonishing technology apparently
in use prior to Noah’s flood.
With recent scientific advancements—such as
powered flight, the space program, DNA manipulation, and cloning—many
experts are beginning to rethink the idea that today’s world is the apex of
civilization’s evolution. It is now possible to consider that a technically
advanced civilization was on the Earth in the far distant past, possessing
knowledge that mankind is only just now relearning.
Bits and pieces of ancient knowledge that survived the Great Flood formed
the essence of the riches that were transported to Egypt by Abraham, the
inheritor of the secrets of Enoch and the biblical patriarch of both Arabs
and the Jews. Abraham, a native of Sumer, known early on as Abram, by some
traditions was said to possess a tablet of symbols representing all of the
knowledge of humankind handed down from the time of Noah.
Known to the
Sumerians as the Table of Destiny, it was this table of knowledge—known to
the early Jews as the Book of Raziel—that reportedly provided King Solomon
with his vast wisdom.
The Sumerian Table of Destiny is thought to be the same as the Tables of
Testimony mentioned in Exodus 31:18. Other Bible verses—Exodus 24:12 and
25:16—make it clear that these tables are not the Ten Commandments.
British author Laurence Gardner believed this ancient archive was directly
associated with the
Emerald Table of Thoth-Hermes, and that its author was
the biblical Ham.
“He was the essential founder of the esoteric and arcane
‘underground stream’ which flowed through the ages,” stated Gardner.
This
table of knowledge was passed from Egypt and Mesopotamia to Greek and Roman
masters, such as Homer, Virgil, Pythagoras, Plato, and Ovid. In more recent
times, it was passed through such secret societies as the Rosicrucians and
Knights Templar and on to the Stuart Royal Society in England.
In Jewish history, the Cabala, also spelled as Kabbalah or Qabbalah, was
supposed to contain hidden meanings.
Such cleverly coded knowledge was
thought to be found within the Torah and other old Hebraic texts, such as
the Sefer Yezirah (Book of Creation) and the Sefer Ha-Zohar (Book of Light).
These books, which predate the Talmud, a compilation of early Jewish laws
and traditions first written in the fifth century A.D., were produced
centuries before the time of Jesus.
According to the Book of Light,
“mysteries of wisdom” were given to Adam by God while still in the fabled
Garden of Eden, generally believed to have been located between the Tigris
and Euphrates Rivers. These elder secrets were then passed on through Adam’s
sons to Noah and on to Abraham long before the Hebrews existed as a distinct
people.
Much like our understanding of history and religion today, the information
within the Cabala became both incomplete and garbled over the centuries
through losses due to war and natural disasters as well as
misinterpretations and foreign influences. But it was this ancient wisdom,
taken from Egypt at the time of the Great Exodus, that formed the core of
Cabalistic knowledge handed down through the centuries via several secret
societies, some of which remain active among us even today.
But what of Solomon’s treasure itself? What happened to the wealth—in both
riches and knowledge—that found a resting place on the Temple Mount in
Jerusalem with the construction of Solomon’s Temple nearly a one thousand
years before the birth of Jesus?
Much of this treasure fell into the hands of the Romans when they sacked
Jerusalem following the Jewish Revolt of 66 A.D. By the time of this
looting, Solomon’s Temple had been built over to become the palace of King
Herod. With the certain advance intelligence that the Romans would be
sending troops to put down the Jewish rebellion, keepers of the knowledge
buried away much of the treasure in the catacombs beneath Herod’s palace.
Alcoves and passages were closed off and sealed with earth.
Thus, when the Romans sacked Jerusalem following revolts in both 66 A.D. and
132 A.D., they found only a portion of the treasure. To have hidden all the
treasure would have prompted a strenuous search by the Roman authorities. As
it was, they were content to move what they found to Rome as war booty. The
best part of the treasure, including both wealth and knowledge, was safely
buried under the Temple Mount and all but forgotten, as most religious
leaders were killed or taken to Rome as prisoners.
In 410 A.D., Alaric, who had been commander of Visigoth auxiliaries under
Roman emperor Theodosius, sacked Rome. Alaric had been proclaimed king over
the Visigoths with the death of Theodosius, and he began his march on Rome
after invading Greece and Northern Italy. It was the first successful attack
on Rome in more than eight hundred years.
Alaric’s troops took the portion of Solomon’s treasure in Rome along with
other prizes of war.
“When Alaric withdrew his forces, the treasures of
Solomon’s Temple went with them,” wrote Colonel Howard Buechner, a former
medical officer with the 45th Infantry Division.
This contention was supported by the work of Otto Rahn, who wrote in 1933 of
four young men who discovered a casket in a Pyrenees cavern, “Was this
reliquary casket part of ‘Solomon’s treasure,’ which was taken by the
Visigoth king Alaric from Rome to Carcassonne in A.D. 410? According to [the
last major ancient Greek philosopher, Proclus], it was filled with objects
that once belonged to King Solomon, the king of the Hebrews.”
The Visigoths secured their booty in the Pyrenees foothills located in the
Languedoc region of what was to become southern France. This area
encompasses the Cathar stronghold at Montségur as well as the small village
of Rennes-le-Château. The secrets of this treasure were handed from the
Goths and the early Franks to the Cathars, the “pure ones” of southern
France.
They considered their Christian beliefs more pure than those of the
Church of Rome, probably because they had access to original documents and
were not dependent on the Church hierarchy to translate and interpret the
Bible. In fact, according to Otto Rahn, Cathar beliefs were greatly
influenced by Druids, priests, and soothsayers who had spread from
Mesopotamia through eastern and western Europe to the British Isles.
Catharism was an odd blending of ancient Earth worship, Eastern mysticism,
Gnosis, and basic Christianity.
The Cathar faith, sometimes described as “Western Buddhism,” might have
spread to all the corners of Europe but for the blood and fire of the
Albigensian Crusade begun in 1209, which may well have been more of a French
civil war than a religious campaign. It was fought between the tightly
controlled and austere northerners and the cultured, freedom-loving peoples
of the south.
Rahn noted the exotic ethnic mixture of the Languedoc region.
“In the third
century B.C., an immigration of peoples from the Caucasus to the West took
place: Phoenicians, Persians, Medeans, Getules (actually Berbers of North
Africa), Armenians, Chaldeans [Sumerians], and Iberians,” he wrote.
Prior to
the Vatican-approved bloodletting, the provinces of southern France were
virtually indepen dent republics that allowed extraordinary freedom of
education, culture, and diversity. Jews were accorded the same rights as the
rest of the citizenry. Both agriculture and the arts were flourishing. Many
of the Cathars, while Christians, nevertheless still worshipped the feminine
goddesses—Isis and Athena—as had their Gothic and Frankish ancestors.
It is not known but strongly suspected by researchers that this hidden
treasure guarded by the Cathars included a copper scroll similar to an
etched scroll of copper found among the Dead Sea Scrolls in 1947 at Qumran,
on the northwest shore of the Dead Sea.
When translated in the mid-1950s at
Manchester University, this scroll proved to be an inventory of a great
treasure. It apparently was one of several copies. With its detailed
directions to hidden Hebrew valuables, the Copper Scroll was literally a
treasure map. Such an inventory in the hidden Visigoth cache would explain
why certain French aristocrats, descendants of the Goths and the Cathars,
who had access to the treasure, fomented the First Crusade, resulting in the
capture of Jerusalem in 1099 A.D.
Less than twenty years after the crusaders took Jerusalem and placed King
Baldwin II of Le Bourg in charge of the occupied territories, nine knights
were granted a military order called the Poor Knights of Christ and of the
Temple of Solomon. This title was soon shortened to the Knights of the
Temple, or Knights Templar. They were allowed to be billeted in Herod’s
palace, the exact location of the hidden treasure as described in the Copper
Scroll.
These knights were led by Hugh de Payens, a nobleman in the service of his
cousin, Hughes, count of Champagne, and Andre de Montbard, the uncle of
Bernard of Clairvaux, later known as the Cistercian Saint Bernard. Montbard
also was a vassal of the count of Champagne. At least two of the original
knights, Rosal and Gondemare, were Cistercian monks prior to their departure
for Jerusalem. In fact, the entire group was closely related both by family
ties and by connections to the Cistercian monks and Flemish royalty
descended from the Cathars. They journeyed to the Holy Land with an agenda:
to recover the remainder of the treasure.
Ostensibly, this order of knights was to protect the roads to Jerusalem, but
their actions were of a very different nature. Rather than guard roads, the
Templar knights spent years excavating under Herod’s palace, the old Temple
of Solomon. The digging was extensive.
British Royal Engineers led by a
Lieutenant Charles Wilson discovered evidence of the Templars while mapping
vaults under Mount Moriah in 1894. They found vaulted passageways with
keystone arches, typical of Templar handiwork. They also found artifacts
consisting of a spur, parts of a sword and lance, and a small Templar cross,
which are still on display in Scotland.
It was during their excavations, according to several accounts, that the
Templars acquired material wealth as well as texts of hidden knowledge, most
probably including some dealing with the life of Jesus and his associations
with the Essenes and Gnostics. They also reportedly acquired the legendary
Tables of Testimony given to Moses as well as other holy relics— perhaps
even the legendary Ark of the Covenant and the Spear of Longinus—which could
have been used to validate their later position as an alternative religious
authority to the Roman Church.
When the Knights Templar transported the remainder of Solomon’s treasure
back to the Languedoc region of southern France, it was reunited with the
portion the Goths had brought from Rome more than seven hundred years
earlier.
The material wealth—King Solomon’s diamonds, precious gems, gold,
and silver—formed the base of the Templars’ legendary fortune. Much of this
was transported to their temple in Paris. Th e esoteric treasure—scrolls and
tablets of ancient knowledge—were kept hidden from the Roman Church in the
elaborate cave systems of the Pyrenees.
On Friday, October 13, 1307, the greedy French king Philip, in debt to the
Templars, moved against the Templars with the blessing of Pope Clement V.
Like their Cathar forebears,
the Templars were charged with all forms of
heresy. Templars throughout Europe were hunted down, killed, and tortured.
The last Templar grand master, Jacques de Molay, was burned at the stake in
1314. But many Templars simply cast off their distinctive surcoats,
identifiable by the red Maltese cross, and blended into the local
populations only to emerge in later years as Freemasons.
When authorities broke into the Paris temple, they found nothing. The
treasure had been removed by the Templars, who apparently dispersed it to
several different locations. Some went to Scotland, where Robert the Bruce
provided the Templars sanctuary, some went to pre-Columbus America, and some
returned to the caverns of Languedoc.
Centuries passed while the devout in southern France kept the secret of the
hidden treasure from both church and state authorities. Th is secret briefl
y broke into public view in the late 1890s, when the young priest of the
small village of Rennes-le-Château discovered some documents hidden in the
alter of his church, which had been consecrated to Mary Magdalene in 1059
and stood on Visigoth ruins dating to the sixth century.
In 1891, Father Francois Berenger Sauniere discovered two genealogies dating
from 1244 and 1644, along with two texts written in the 1780s by a former
parish priest, Abbot Antoine Bigou. The Bigou texts were unusual and
appeared to be written in different and indecipherable codes. Sauniere took
his discovery to his superior, the bishop of nearby Carcassonne, who sent
him on to Paris to meet with the director general of the Saint-Sulpice
Seminary, reportedly a center for an unorthodox society called the Compagnie
du Saint-Sacrement, reputed to be a front for the
Priory of Sion.
This
priory is thought to include members committed to keeping secret the Templar
treasure and knowledge.
Whatever was in the documents changed Sauniere’s life. He journeyed to
Paris, where he mingled with the Parisian cultural elite and soon came into
great wealth. Before his sudden death in 1917, researchers estimated he had
spent several million dollars on construction and renovations in the town.
He also had the town’s road and water supply upgraded, assembled a massive
library, and built a zoological garden, a lavish country house named Villa
Bethania, and a round tower named Tour Magdala, or Tower of Magdalene.
Within the renovated church, Sauniere erected a strange statue of the demon
Asmodeus—“custodian of secrets, guardian of hidden treasures, and, according
to ancient Judaic legend, builder of Solomon’s temple.”
Sauniere began to exhibit a defiant independence toward his Church
superiors, refusing to disclose the source of his newfound wealth or accept
a transfer from
Rennes-le-Château, where he and his house keeper were seen
digging incessantly in the graveyard around the church. Yet, when push came
to shove, the Vatican supported Sauniere, a good indication of the
significance of his discoveries.
On January 17, 1917, Sauniere suffered a sudden stroke. A nearby priest was
called to administer last rites but, “visibly shaken,” refused to do so
after hearing Sauniere’s confession, which has never been made public.
His
house keeper and companion, Marie Denarnaud, kept her silence about
Sauniere’s activities, living quietly in the Villa Bethania. Toward the end
of her life, she sold the villa to a man whom she promised she would tell a
secret that would make him both wealthy and powerful. Unfortunately, she too
died of a stroke before passing along this secret.
Thus began the mystery of Rennes-le-Château.
“Speculation has varied over
the years as to the true nature of Sauniere’s discovery,” wrote Lynn
Picknett and Clive Prince; “most prosaically it has been suggested that he
found a hoard of treasure, while others believe it was something
considerably more stupendous, such as the Ark of the Covenant, the treasure
of the Jerusalem Temple, the Holy Grail—or even the tomb of Christ....
The Priory claim that what Sauniere had discovered were parchments
containing genealogical information that proves the survival of the [Franks]
Merovingian dynasty.”
Whatever Sauniere found, it seems to have been linked
to Solomon’s treasure long hidden in the nearby cave systems by first the
Goths and later the Templars.
In review of what is known about the Father Sauniere affair, it appears
doubtful that the priest actually found the lost treasure. It is more likely
that his find was some ancient genealogies inimical to the Catholic Church
and perhaps some clues to the location of the treasure. Such clues were
expanded upon by the work of Otto Rahn with further expeditions to Languedoc
financed by SS chief Himmler.
Rahn’s work was getting him closer to the
location of the treasure. “In a letter written to [Rahn’s close friend Karl
Maria Wiligut-Weisthor] in September 1935, Otto Rahn informed his friend
that he was at a place where he had reason to believe the Grail might be
found, and that Weisthor should keep the matter secret with the exception of
mentioning it to Himmler,” reported British authors David Wood and Ian
Campbell.
By the start of the war, Rahn was dead but his knowledge was kept alive by
Himmler. According to author Angebert, as early as June 1943, a group of
German geologists, historians, and ethnologists camped near Montségur and
began excavations that lasted into November. This expedition failed to
produce the treasure.
BUT OTTO SKORZENY, dispatched by Himmler in early 1944, apparently had
better luck.
“The commando force reached Languedoc in early March 1944, and
set up headquarters at the base of Montségur. They spent a few days
exploring the Cathar fortress and in reconnaissance of the surrounding
mountains. They discovered remnants of what had once been a 3,000-step
stairway which led from the castle to an exit in the valley below,” wrote
Colonel Howard Buechner.
Skorzeny, disdaining intellectual study of the problem over the treasure’s
location, set about his work from the standpoint of a tactician. He quickly
surmised that Rahn and the members of the 1943 expedition had looked in the
obvious—and wrong—locations.
The Germans promptly found a secret path used as an escape route for the
Cathars during the siege of Montségur, which ended in March 1244, exactly
seven hundred years earlier.
“Skorzeny and his men scouted along this path
and soon discovered what appeared to be an ancient trail leading into the
higher mountains,” related Colonel Buechner.
“At an undisclosed distance
from Montségur they found a fortified entrance to a large grotto. Perhaps it
was the grotto of Bouan, which was the last refuge of the Cathars after the
fall of Montségur. Not far from this grotto was the mountain called La Peyre.
Near the crest of this mountain was another grotto and in this cavern, it is
said, they found the treasure.”
On March 15, 1944, Skorzeny sent a one-word telegram to Berlin. It read:
“Ureka [Eureka, or I have found it!].”
It was signed with Skorzeny’s nickname, “Scar.”
His message was soon answered with a cryptic note:
“Well done.
Congratulations. Watch the sky tomorrow at noon. Await our arrival.”
This was signed “Reichsfuehrer SS.”
According to Colonel Buechner, there followed an amazing coincidence of
events. Each March 16, local descendants of the Cathars gathered at
Montségur to pay homage to their ancestors who had died there seven hundred
years earlier.
In 1944, the local German military governor refused to grant
permission, claiming Hitler’s Third Reich had “historic rights” to Montségur.
In defiance of this prohibition, a group of pilgrims traveled to Montségur
anyway and there encountered Skorzeny and his men. The giant commander
chief, who had a reputation for defying bureaucracy, granted their request,
since he had control of the treasure.
The pilgrims placed special significance on the date March 16, 1944, because
of an ancient prophecy that stated,
“At the end of seven hundred years, the
laurel will be green once more.”
Many assumed this meant the beginning of a
revival of Catharism. That year’s seven hundredth anniversary delegation of
pilgrims was much larger than usual.
“Thus it was that the worshippers were
on top of the mountain [Montségur] at precisely the time when Skorzeny had
been instructed to ‘watch the sky,’” noted Colonel Buechner.
Near noon, a Fieseler Storch, or Stork, light airplane bearing German markings approached
and created a giant spectacle for the gathered crowd.
The airplane, which
may have carried either Himmler, Nazi ideologist Alfred Rosenberg, or both,
used skywriting equipment to produce a huge Celtic cross across the sky over Montségur.
“The pilgrims on the mountaintop were awestruck and reacted as if a miracle
had occurred,” said Colonel Buechner.
“They had no idea that the fabulous
treasure of the Cathars had been discovered only a short time before and
that the plane was saluting the victorious expedition.”
The next afternoon, an official delegation arrived and congratulations and
medals were handed out. This delegation was headed by Rosenberg and Oberst,
or colonel, Wolfram Sievers, a ranking member of the Ahnenerbe SS, the
organization dealing with esoteric and occult matters for Himmler’s Black
Shirts.
According to Colonel Buechner’s sources, the treasure was carried
out of the Pyrenees by pack-mule train to the village of Lavelanet, where it
was loaded onto trucks for the journey to a rail head.
Guarded rail cars
carried the treasure to the small town of Merkers, located about forty miles
from Berlin, where it was catalogued by hand-picked members of the Ahnenerbe
SS and then moved to other locations, including Hitler’s redoubt at
Berchtesgaden, where some of the treasure was carried into the extensive
tunnel system, large parts of which remain inaccessible today.
“During its initial days at Merkers, the ‘Treasure of the Ages’ was intact
for the last time,” stated Colonel Buechner. The Nazis apparently had
secured the world’s greatest treasure trove—both of wealth and of lost
secrets.
According to Colonel Buechner, the treasure consisted of:
-
Thousands of gold coins, some of which dated back to the early days of the
Roman Empire and earlier.
-
Items believed to have come from the Temple of Solomon, which included
gold plates and fragments of wood that provided strong evidence that the
partially decomposed relic was the fabled Ark of the Covenant.
-
Twelve stone tablets bearing pre-runic inscriptions, which none of the
experts were able to read. These items comprised the stone grail of the
Germans and of Otto Rahn.
-
A beautiful silvery cup with an emerald-like base made of what appeared to
be jasper. Three gold plaques on the cup were inscribed with cuneiform
script in an ancient language.
-
A large number of religious objects of various types, which were
unidentifiable as to time and significance. However, there were many crosses
from different periods, made of gold or silver and adorned with pearls and
precious stones.
-
An abundance of precious stones in all sizes and shapes.
By the time the Allies occupied Germany, much of the treasure had been
melted down into bars and shipped out of the country.
A vast amount of gold
and silver, as well as pieces of art and religious artifacts, were taken
into Allied hands in the town of Merkers, but the most rare and valuable
items dropped from public view.
“When Martin Bormann’s wife—Frau Gerda Buch Bormann—was captured at a small
hotel in northern Italy, she had 2,200 antique gold coins in her
possession,” wrote Buechner.
“These priceless coins were almost certainly a
part of Hitler’s personal share of the Treasure of Solomon.... Bormann
himself sent gold coins to Argentina by submarine, where on arrival, his
treasure was placed under the personal protection of Evita Peron.”
Bormann’s
wife suffered from cancer and was released by the Allied authorities. She
died of mercury poisoning on March 23, 1946.
Lest anyone consider Colonel Buechner’s account of Otto Rahn and the taking
of Solomon’s treasure some personal fantasy, they would do well to consider
his credentials. A native of New Orleans, Howard A. Buechner earned a
bachelor’s degree from Tulane University and a medical degree from Louisiana
State University.
During World War II, Dr. Buechner was a medical officer
with the 3rd Battalion, 157th Infantry Regiment of the 45th Infantry
Division, the unit that arrived first at Dachau concentration camp. Dr.
Buechner was the first American physician to enter the camp upon its
liberation. He was later promoted to colonel while serving in the postwar
reserves. It was during his wartime experiences, on the scene, that Colonel
Buechner first learned of the loss of Solomon’s treasure.
Buechner’s awards
included the Medical Combat Badge, the Bronze Star, three battle stars, the
Army Commendation Medal, the War Cross, and the Distinguished Service Cross
of Louisiana. He also became a professor of medicine at Tulane and served as
emeritus professor of medicine at LSU, where an honorary professorship was
established in his name. His papers on tuberculosis and other lung diseases
made him an internationally recognized expert.
Colonel Buechner and other researchers have estimated the treasure trove
recovered by Skorzeny in southern France in excess of $60 billion, based on
the current price of gold.
This, added to the other loot from Europe, gave
the Nazis more than enough economic clout to continue their plans for world
conquest long after the end of World War II. Such wealth made it possible
for Bormann and other Nazis to misdirect West German investigations and
silence foreign governments and news organizations. And it provided the
means to infiltrate and buy out numerous companies and corporations, both
outside the United States and within.
To understand how a shadowy Nazi empire was created, one must return to
German business history and take note of Bormann’s activities beginning in
mid-1944.
IN THE FALL OF 1942, THE GERMAN SIXTH ARMY WAS RAMPAGING virtually
unhindered through the Ukraine in Russia. Its objectives were Baku and the
rich Caucasian oil fields. With these oil reserves in hand, Hitler planned
to turn south and capture the oil of the Middle East in a combined operation
with Field Marshal Erwin Rommel’s famed Afrika Korps’ assault from North
Africa.
This scheme was thwarted by Rommel’s defeat at El Alamein—made
possible by the now-known decoding of German Enigma messages—and the
eventual destruction of the German Sixth Army at Stalin grad, a city on the
Volga River.
Stalin grad, which the Germans had entered in strength by late September of
that year, soon turned into a cauldron of death and destruction. Even
breathing became a chore due to the constant shelling and bombing. Though of
dubious strategic value, both Hitler and Stalin insisted there be no
withdrawal from the fiercely defended city, the namesake of the Soviet
leader.
Russian pincer attacks isolated the Sixth Army in late November, but
organized resistance did not end until February 2, 1943, with the surrender
of more than ninety thousand German soldiers—most of them reduced to skin
and bones through lack of supplies. With the loss of the Sixth Army, ranking
Nazis recognized that the war’s momentum had turned against them on the
Eastern Front. It was never to be regained.
Six months later, after the disastrous Battle of Kursk, in which the Nazi
war machine lost nearly three-fourths of its entire mechanized force, it
became clear that the defeat of Germany was more than a possibility, it was
a probability. Top Nazis began to draw up plans for escape and the
continuation of their goals.
Curt Reiss, a noted news correspondent of the time, who traveled extensively
in Europe, wrote in detail about the Nazis’ plans for survival, in his book
The Nazis Go Underground. Astonishingly, this was published in the spring of
1944, prior to the Allied D-Day landings in France that June.
“They had better means for preparing to go underground than any other
potential underground movement in the entire previous history of the world.
They had all the machinery of the well- organized Nazi state. And they had a
great deal of time to prepare everything. They worked very hard, but they
did nothing hastily, left nothing to chance. Everything was thought through
logically and organized to the last detail. Himmler [along with Bormann]
planned with the utmost coolness. He chose for the work only the
best-qualified experts—the best qualified, that is, in matters of
underground work.”
Reiss pointed out that when the Nazi Party gained control in Germany, the
apparatus of the party was simply transferred over to the apparatus of the
state.
“Now, when the party wished to go underground and still retain its
organization, all it had to do was simply to act in reverse order; that is,
to transfer—or, more accurately perhaps, retransfer—the apparatus of the
state into the party apparatus—a not-too-difficult enterprise, since both
apparatuses were still organized along parallel lines,” he explained.
According to Reiss, some misgivings about the fate of Germany arose even
before the defeat of the Sixth Army at Stalin grad. He reported on a private
meeting on November 7, 1942, in Munich, between SS chief Heinrich Himmler
and Hitler’s top lieutenant Martin Bormann.
This meeting occurred only two
days after Allied armies had landed in North Africa. Himmler later confided
the topic of discussion, telling his most trusted associates,
“It is
possible that Germany will be defeated on the military front. It is even
possible that she may have to capitulate. But never must the National
Socialist German Workers’ Party capitulate. That is what we have to work for
from now on.”
In May 1943, in the wake of the defeat at Stalin grad, Reiss said German
industrialists met in Chateau Huegel near Essen, home of the Krupps, and
reviewed the situation of their nation.
The decision was to distance German
commerce from the Nazi regime, Reiss wrote, adding:
“All future changes
discussed at the meeting centered around the idea of divorcing German
industry as far as possible from Nazism as such. Krupp [von Bohlen und Halbach] and [I.G. Farben Director Georg von] Schnitzler declared that it
would be much easier for them to work after the war if the world were
certain that German industry was not owned and run by the Nazis. He said
that Goering as well as other influential party men saw eye to eye with him
on this, and would consent to any arrangement that did not involve the
prestige of the party.”
Reiss explained why these captains of industry faked a divorce from Nazism
rather than mounting genuine opposition—because they had prospered under
Hitler.
He had “liberated” them from the threat of worker unions and
strikes, kept taxes much lower than other industrialized nations, and
brought them unprecedented profits through his rearmament program.
“But all
these are only symptoms,” wrote Reiss. “More important than these symptoms
is the fact that the Nazis as a dynamic movement had assured German big
businessmen of basic conditions far more favorable than those they enjoyed
under the republic or even under the Kaiser. Could they wish for anything
better than a world constantly on the brink of new wars?”
As noted previously, it was not only German businessmen who profited from
the war. Their counterparts in En gland and America were all capitalizing on
the worldwide conflict.
Reiss pointed out that only days after the meeting
of industrialists, Farben’s von Schnitzler flew to Madrid and declared he
had escaped Germany just ahead of the Gestapo.
“Spain scarcely seemed a logical asylum. Switzerland or Sweden would have
been much healthier places to repair to,” noted Reiss. “And anyway, why
should Herr von Schnitzler have had to fear the Gestapo, since his
son-in-law, Herbert Scholz, was one of its leading officials? No, there is
no reason to believe a word of what Baron Schnitzler said in those first
interviews.”
Reiss said Schnitzler’s “flight” was nothing but an elaborate
ruse, similar to that of Germany’s steel magnate Fritz Thyssen, who moved to
France in 1940, reportedly to escape the Nazis, but ended the war in
Germany’s prestigious hotel Adion, where he remained in contact with his old
friend, banker Kurt Freiherr von Schroeder.
By the end of 1943, another ranking Nazi had left the Fatherland.
Reichsbank
president Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht had left the Fatherland for
Switzerland, ostensibly for health reasons. During his stay, accounts of his
“Schlacht Plan” began to circulate. It was similar to that of Schnitzler—a
collaboration between German and Allied corporate business with the major
German banks acting as clearinghouses for such transactions.
Naturally,
Schacht was to direct this effort. Despite his activities as one of the
Reich’s principal money men, Schacht suffered no real penalties after the
war. He was acquitted by the Nuremberg war crimes court, which stated that
rearmament was not itself a criminal act. He was convicted in a German court
and sentenced to eight years in prison, but this was overturned on appeal.
Four more efforts to convict Schacht in court came to no avail.
By late August 1944, following the D-Day invasion of Europe and despite the
advent of the V-1 wonder weapon, many in the Nazi leadership were beginning
to see the writing on the wall. When the French town of Saint-Lô, center of
the German defense line facing the Allied beachhead in Normandy, fell on
July 18, opening all of southern France to Allied armor and infantry, they
knew the end of the war was only a matter of time.
According to captured medical records, Hitler was on a roller- coaster ride
of euphoria and depression due to large daily doses of amphetamines, and had
increasingly lost contact with reality. However, the second most powerful
man in the Reich, Hitler’s deputy Martin Bormann, was not so incapacitated.
Bormann, a stocky, nondescript man with thinning brown hair, was born in
1900 in Halberstadt in central Germany. He was the son of a cavalry sergeant
who later became a civil servant. Young Bormann dropped out of high school
after one year and was later drafted into the army during World War I, where
he served with the field artillery.
Returning from the war, Bormann joined
the right-wing Freikorps and served a year in prison in 1924 for his part in
the murder of his former elementary school teacher, who had been accused of
betraying a Nazi leader when the Ruhr was under French occupation. Following
his release from a Leipzig prison, Bormann joined the Nazi Party and rose
steadily through the ranks.
Shortly after Hitler became German chancellor in 1933, Bormann was appointed
chief of staff to Deputy Fuehrer Rudolf Hess. After Hess’s ill-fated
flight to Scotland in 1941, Bormann assumed his duties as well as becoming
secretary to Hitler. Nazi leaders dubbed Bormann the “brown eminence” and
“the Machiavelli behind the office desk,” as he soon became the most
powerful man in Nazi Germany. No one got to Hitler but through Bormann.
In 1943, Bormann gained total control over both the Nazi Party and the
German economy, including all top-secret technology. Already named to
replace Hess as head of the Nazi Party, Bormann wrested economic and
political control from Himmler by having Hitler prohibit the SS chief from
issuing orders to the Gauleiters, or district leaders, through his SS
commanders.
According to Heinrich Hoffman, Hitler’s personal photographer
and the man who introduced him to his mistress Eva Braun, Hitler once said
of Bormann,
“I know he is brutal, but what he undertakes he finishes. I can
rely absolutely on that. With his ruthlessness and brutality he always sees
that my orders are carried out.”
Bormann reigned supreme.
On August 10, 1944, Bormann called top German business leaders and Nazi
Party officials to the Hotel Maison Rouge in Strasbourg. According to
captured transcripts of the meeting, its purpose was to see that “the
economy of the Third Reich was projected onto a postwar profit-seeking
track.”
This “track” came to be known as Aktion Adlerflug, or
Operation
Eagle Flight. It was nothing less than the perpetuation of National
Socialism through the massive flight of money, gold, stocks, bonds, patents,
copyrights, and even technical specialists from Germany.
An emissary for Bormann, SS Obergruppenfuehrer Dr. Scheid, a director of the
industrial firm of Hermadorff & Schenburg Company, explained the purpose of
the meeting to one attendee:
“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 ensure the economic resurgence of Germany.”
“[A]fter 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.”
As part of this plan, Bormann, aided by the black-clad SS, the
central Deutsche Bank, the steel empire of Fritz Thyssen, and the powerful
I.G. Farben combine, created 750 foreign front corporations—58 in Portugal,
112 in Spain, 233 in Sweden, 214 in Switzerland, 35 in Turkey, and 98 in
Argentina.
According to Paul Manning, a CBS Radio journalist during World War II and
the author of Martin Bormann: Nazi in Exile, Bormann “dwelled” on control of
the 750 corporations.
“[Bormann] utilized every known device to
disguise their ownership and their patterns of operations: use of nominees,
option agreements, pool agreements, endorsements in blank, escrow deposits,
pledges, collateral loans, rights of first refusal, management contracts,
service contracts, patent agreements, cartels, and withholding procedures.”
Copies of all transactions and even field reports were maintained and later
shipped to Bormann’s archives in South America.
Bormann followed strategies perfected by I.G. Farben chairman Hermann
Schmitz.
The names of various companies and corporations would be changed
and interchanged to create confusion as to ownership. For example, I.G.
Chemie became Societe Internationale pour Participations Industrielles et
Commerciales SA, while in Switzerland, the same organization was known as
International Industrie und Handelsbeteiligungen AG, or Interhandel.
Another tactic was to name a compliant citizen from each country as the
nominal head of a given corporation. Meanwhile, the directors would be a
blend of German administrators and bank officials. Officers at senior and
management levels would be German scientists and technicians. The real
ownership of the corporation would be Nazis holding bearer bonds as proof of
stock ownership.
These individuals, all part of the Bormann operation, would
remain in the shadows. The targeted nations generally were appreciative of
Bormann’s scheme, as it meant increased employment and a more favorable
balance of trade.
In 1941, 171 American corporations had more than $420 million invested in
German companies.
After war was declared, Bormann merely had operatives in
neutral countries such as Switzerland and Argentina buy American stocks
using foreign exchange funds in the Buenos Aires branch of Deutsche Bank and
Swiss banks. Large demand deposits were also placed with major banks in New
York City to include National City Bank (now Citibank), Chase (now JP Morgan
Chase), Manufacturers and Hanover (now part of JP Morgan Chase), Morgan
Guaranty, and Irving Trust (now part of the Bank of New York).
At the Strasbourg meeting, Scheid cited several prominent American companies
that had been useful to Germany in the past. Due to patent obligations,
United States Steel, American Steel and Wire, and National Tube had to work
in conjunction with the Krupp empire. He also mentioned Zeiss Company, the
Leica Company, and the Hamburg-Amerika line as firms that were especially
effective in protecting Nazi interests.
Bormann’s complex, yet well organized, flight capital operation confounded
Orvis A. Schmidt, the U.S. Treasury Department’s director of foreign funds
control.
“The network of trade, industrial, and
cartel organizations has been streamlined and intermeshed, not only
organizationally but also by what has officially been described as
‘personnel union.’ Legal authority to operate this organizational machinery
has been vested in the concerns that have majority capacity in the key
industries, such as those producing iron and steel, coal and basic
chemicals. These concerns have been deliberately welded together by
exchanges of stock to the point where a handful of men can make policy and
other decisions that affect us all.”
AT THE HEART of this flight capital program lay the huge I.G. Farben
conglomerate.
The Farben complex already had produced many scientific
breakthroughs for the Third Reich.
“Its experts developed the noted Buna Process for the manufacture of synthetic rubber, freeing Germany from
dependence on natural rubber,” explained Paul Manning.
“It developed the
hydrogenation process for making motor fuels and lubricating oils from
coal. Germany’s shortage of bauxite, the raw material essential to
manufacture aluminum, was surmounted by its developments in utilizing the
element magnesium.”
Schmidt said Treasury investigations discovered Farben documents that showed
the firm maintained an interest in more than 700 companies around the world.
This number did not include Farben’s normal corporate structure, which
covered ninety-three countries, nor the 750 corporations created under
Bormann’s flight capital program.
I.G. Farben also was at the hub of money transfers out of Nazi Germany.
Even before the end of the war, for example,
“I.G. Latin American firms all
maintained, unrecorded, in their books, secret cash accounts in banks in the
names of their top officials,” wrote Manning. “These were used to receive
and to disburse confidential payments; firms dealing with Farben wanted this
business but certainly did not wish it known to British and United States
economic authorities.”
“The great German combines were the spearheads of economic penetration in
the other American republics [South and Central American nations],” stated
U.S. Treasury official Schmidt. “In the field of drugs and pharmaceuticals
the Bayer, Merck, and Schering companies enjoyed a virtual monopoly. I.G.
Farben subsidiaries had a firm hold on the dye and chemical market. German
enterprises such as Tubos Mannesmann, Ferrostaal, AEG, and Siemens-Schuckert
played a dominant role in the construction, electrical, and engineering
fields. Shipping companies and, in some areas, German airlines, were well
entrenched.”
The foundation for a multinational German business empire was
in place.
AS IN THE 1930s, the largest banking enterprises provided the underlying
financial foundation for the resurgence of National Socialism.
The chairman of Deutsche Bank, Dr. Hermann Josef Abs, was particularly
important to the Nazi flight capital program. Abs was also a director of I.G. Farben, Daimler-Benz, and Siemens.
Martin Bormann maintained a cordial
relationship with the Berlin banker. Manning noted:
“[Bormann] knew in 1943... he had the means to ultimately take the reins of finance unto himself.... He could set a new Nazi state policy, when the time was ripe for the
general transfer of capital, gold, stocks, and bearer bonds to safety in
neutral countries.”
Deutsche Bank, Dresdner Bank, and
Commerzbank
constituted the three major German banks, but it was Abs’s Deutsche Bank
that took the lead in establishing economic authority over the banks and
corporations of the occupied countries.
During the war, Deutsche Bank coordinated Nazi gold transactions, purchasing
4,446 kilograms of gold from the Reichsbank and selling it in Turkey. Much
of this gold came from victims of Nazi persecution. It arrived at the
Reichsbank in crates and suitcases, sometimes marked with their place of
origin, such as Auschwitz or Lublin. This wealth was greatly expanded by the
loot of occupied Europe.
According to author Ladislas Farago, this included
“millions in gold marks, pound sterling, dollars, and Swiss francs, 3,500
ounces of platinum, over 550,000 ounces of gold, and 4,639 carats in
diamonds and other precious stones, as well as hundreds of pieces of works
of art.”
According to The Guinness Book of World Records, the “greatest unsolved bank
robbery” in world history was the disappearance of the entire German
treasury at the end of the war. But was it truly unsolved or merely covered
up at the highest levels?
Both Abs and Schmitz taught Bormann how to protect his wealth by depositing
it in Swiss banks. Bormann saw to it that while the Reich allowed occupied
countries to continue printing their own currency, the major commercial
banks of Germany dealt in gold. Manning wrote,
“The gold, whatever its
origin, would be stamped with Third Reich seals and periodically sold to
leading Swiss banks, as well as to the Swiss National Bank.... The money
[from the gold sales] was then left on deposit in various numbered accounts
to be invested in Switzerland and in other neutral countries, and ultimately
to maintain the Bormann party apparatus abroad.”
Ironically, it was a 1934 law passed in Switzerland that preserved Nazi
loot. The law that prohibited the disclosure of the owners of private bank
accounts was initially meant to keep the Gestapo from locating the savings
of German Jews. To this day, it has been used to hide Nazi wealth. Today
many American corporations have followed Bormann’s lead by depositing their
money in Swiss banks.
Swiss officials claim that their policies toward the Allied and Axis powers
were those of balanced neutrality, but the scales were heavily tipped in
favor of the Nazis, at least on economic matters.
“Declassified
intelligence reports reveal that Swiss banks, particularly the Swiss
National Bank, accepted gold looted from the national treasuries of Nazi-
occupied countries and from dead Jews alike, gold they either bought
outright or laundered for the Nazis before sending it on to other neutral
countries,” wrote Adam LeBor, author of Hitler’s Secret Bankers: The Myth
of Swiss Neutrality During the Holocaust.
According to LeBor,
“Swiss banks
supplied the foreign currency that the Third Reich needed to buy vital war
material. Swiss banks were the vital financial conduit that allowed Nazi
economic officials to channel their loot to a safe haven in Switzerland.
Swiss banks financed Nazi foreign intelligence operations by providing funds
for German front companies in Spain and Portugal.”
Bormann had a personal account at the Reichsbank under the fictitious name
“Max Heiliger,” into which he siphoned a substantial portion of the Reich’s
wealth. Utilizing both gold and “treasure,” Bormann, through his chief of
economics, Dr. Helmut von Hummel, sent these riches out of the country for
later use.
Abs presents a classic example of the survivability of high-level bankers.
He not only survived the war but was instrumental in Germany’s postwar
revival, becoming a financial adviser to West Germany’s first chancellor,
Konrad Adenauer. He maintained his positions on the boards of Deutsche Bank,
Daimler-Benz, and Siemens.
In 1978, Abs headed a West German consortium that
managed to buy and return nearly $20 million worth of artwork taken from
Germany in the 1930s by the Jewish Baron Robert von Hirsch.
Later that same
year, Abs addressed American business leaders at a meeting chaired by fellow
banker John J. McCloy, onetime chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank, the Ford
Foundation, and the Council on Foreign Relations.
McCloy served as a member
of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Warren Commission and was a legal adviser
to
the Rockefeller family.
It was Abs who had prevented two American banks in France—Morgan et Cie and
Chase of New York—from being closed or controlled by the German occupation
authorities. According to U.S. Treasury reports cited by Manning, this
exemption came through an “unspoken understanding among international
bankers that wars may come and go but the flux of wealth goes on forever.”
This “understanding” was principally between Abs and Lord Hartley Shawcross,
a leader in the City of London financial center and a board member of many
international companies. Shawcross, a lawyer who was a special adviser to
Morgan Guaranty Trust of New York as well as the two American banks in
France, was later named chief prosecutor for Britain in the Nuremberg war
crimes trials.
In the 1950s, Shawcross, along with his friend Dr. Abs,
formed the Society for the Protection of Foreign Investments of World War
II, headquartered in Cologne, West Germany.
Bormann’s Operation Eagle Flight was substantially helped by the close
connections with foreign banks and businesses begun long before the war.
According to former U.S. Department of Justice Nazi War Crimes prosecutor
John Loft us, much of the wealth was passed out of Germany by German banker
Fritz Thyssen through his bank in Holland, which, in turn, owned the Union
Banking Corporation (UBC) in New York City.
Loftus is president of the
Florida Holocaust Museum and the author of several books on CIA-Nazi
connections, including The Belarus Secret and The Secret War Against the
Jews.
Two prominent U.S. business leaders who supported Hitler and served on the
board of directors of the Union Banking Corporation were George Herbert
Walker and his son-in-law Prescott Bush,
father of
George H. W. Bush and
grandfather of President George W. Bush.
The attorneys for these dealings
were John Foster Dulles and his brother Allen. John later became secretary
of state under President Dwight D. Eisenhower while Allen became one of the
longest-serving CIA directors before being fired by President John F.
Kennedy in 1961. Both were original members of the
Council on Foreign
Relations.
On October 20, 1942, the office of U.S. Alien Property Custodian, operating
under the “Trading With the Enemy Act” (U.S. Government Vesting Order No.
248), seized the shares of UBC on the grounds that the bank was financing
Hitler.
Also seized were Bush’s holdings in the Hamburg-America ship line
that had been used to ferry Nazi propagandists and arms.
Another company
essential to the passing of Nazi money was the Holland American Trading
Company, a subsidiary of UBC. It was through Fritz Thyssen’s Dutch Bank,
originally founded by Thyssen’s father in 1916, that Nazi money was passed.
This Dutch connection tied the Bush and Nazi money directly to former SS
officer and founder of the
Bilderberg Group,
Prince Bernhard of the
Netherlands, who was once secretary to the board of directors of I.G.
Farben, with close connections to the Dutch Bank.
“Thyssen did
not need any foreign bank accounts because his family secretly owned an
entire chain of banks. He did not have to transfer his Nazi assets at the
end of World War II, all he had to do was transfer the ownership
documents—stocks, bonds, deeds, and trusts—from his bank in Berlin through
his bank in Holland to his American friends in New York City: Prescott Bush
and Herbert Walker. Thyssen’s partners in crime were the father and
father-in-law of a future president of the United States.”
The leading shareholder in UBC was E. Roland Harriman, son of Edward H.
Harriman, who had been an early and important mentor to Prescott Bush.
Another son, Averell Harriman, also held ownership in UBC. He was named
ambassador to the Soviet Union by President Roosevelt in 1943 and
participated in all major wartime conferences.
Averell later became
ambassador to Great Britain, U.S. secretary of commerce, and governor of New
York State. Both Harrimans had been members of the Yale secret society Skull
and Bones and were closely connected to the globalists at the Council on
Foreign Relations. Averell also was a close advisor to President Lyndon
Johnson.
On November 17, 1942, U.S. authorities also seized the Silesian- American
Corporation, managed by Prescott Bush and his father-in-law, George Herbert
Walker, and charged the firm with being a Nazi front company that was
supplying vital coal to Germany.
But according to government documents that
have recently come to light and were published by the New Hampshire Gazette
in 2003,
“the grandfather of President George W. Bush failed to divest
himself of more than a dozen ‘enemy national’ relationships that continued
as late as 1951.”
The newly released documents also showed that Bush and his
associates routinely tried to conceal their business activities from
government investigators and that such dealings were conducted through the
New York private banking firm of Brown Brothers Harriman. Brown Brothers
Harriman, the oldest privately owned bank in America, was formed in 1931
when the Brown brothers, originally importers of Irish linen, merged with
railroad tycoon Edward H. Harriman.
“After the war,” according to the Gazette report, “a total of 18 additional
Brown Brothers Harriman and UBC-related client assets were seized under the
Trading with the Enemy Act, including several that showed the continuation
of a relationship with the Thyssen family after the initial 1942 seizures.
The records also show that Bush and the Harrimans conducted business after
the war with related concerns doing business in or moving assets into
Switzerland, Panama, Argentina and Brazil—all critical outposts for the
flight of Nazi capital after Germany’s surrender in 1945.”
Why was Prescott Bush not more openly and aggressively prosecuted for his
Nazi dealings? This may be due to the fact that the patriarch Bush was
“instrumental in the creation of the USO in late 1941,” according to a news
release from the United Service Organization in 2002.
After all, it would
have looked very bad during wartime to publicly prosecute as a Nazi asset
the man who helped create the USO, so beloved by U.S. servicemen in all
subsequent wars.
“The story of Prescott Bush and Brown Brothers Harriman is an introduction
to the real history of our country,” said publisher and historian Edward
Boswell.
“It exposes the money-making motives behind our foreign policies,
dating back a full century. The ability of Prescott Bush and the Harrimans
to bury their checkered pasts also reveals a collusion between Wall Street
and the media that exists to this day.”
It was rumored that the trial transcripts of the 1942 prosecution of
Prescott Bush were destroyed in the
September 11, 2001, collapse of World
Trade Center 7, which housed offices of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. The SEC admitted that more than seven thousand prosecution files
were lost with the building, including files on Enron and World .com.
Prescott Bush’s banking connection to Nazis was not the only object of
U.S. investigations during the war. Rockefeller-owned Standard Oil also
came under scrutiny for a series of complex business deals that resulted in
desperately needed gasoline reaching Nazi Germany.
“None of these
transactions was ever made public,” reported journalist Charles Higham. “The
details of them remained buried in classified files for over forty years.”
However, it was established that Standard Oil shipped oil to fascist Spain
throughout World War II, paid for by Spanish dictator Francisco Franco from
funds that had been unblocked by the Federal Reserve Bank and passed to Nazi
Germany from the vaults of the Bank of En gland, the Bank of France, and the
Bank for International Settlements.
Such shipments through Spain to Hamburg
indirectly but materially assisted the Axis.
“While American civilians and
the armed services suffered alike from restrictions, more gasoline went to
Spain than it did to domestic customers,” noted Higham.
Questioned about this by the New York Times, a spokesman for U.S. Secretary
of State Cordell Hull explained that the oil was coming from the Caribbean,
not the United States.
What was not explained was that Standard Oil, under
the leadership of William Stamps Farish, had early on changed the country of
registration for Standard’s tanker fleet to Panama. Higham claimed that
both Standard chiefs, Farish and Teagle, were “mesmerized by Germany” and
were close associates of I.G. Farben’s president Hermann Schmitz.
The
person who authorized the masking of Standard’s shipping through Panamanian
registry was then-undersecretary of the navy James V. Forrestal, also a vice
president of General Aniline and Film (GAF).
Another aspect of Bormann’s flight capital program concerned Hermann
Schmitz, who, as a director of Thyssen’s steel empire, owned companies in
neutral Sweden, along with other German firms.
Schmitz’s Swedish firms built
ships and transported coal and coke.
“A further example of masked investment
was the money paid into the Swedish shipping firm of Rederi A/B Skeppsbron,
which received a German-guaranteed loan of $3 million... in which the
vessels were mortgaged to the lender,” explained Paul Manning.
“Although the
Swedish company remained officially the owner of the vessels, the Hamburg-Amerika
line [part of Prescott Bush’s holdings] was the real owner.”
“It is bad enough that the Bush family helped raise the money for Thyssen
to give Hitler his start in the 1920s, but giving aid and comfort to the
enemy in time of war is treason,” declared Nazi prosecutor Loft us.
“The
Bush’s bank helped the Thyssens make the Nazi steel that killed Allied
soldiers. As bad as financing the Nazi war machine may seem, aiding and
abetting the Holocaust was worse. Thyssen’s coal mines used Jewish slaves as
if they were disposable chemicals. There are six million skeletons in the
Thyssen family closet, and a myriad of criminal and historical questions to
be answered about the Bush family complicity.”
ALONG WITH THE desire to create a Nazi-directed European economy,
Martin
Bormann and his henchmen also drew up plans to create a new generation of
National Socialists, beginning in Germany but with an eye toward other
nations.
Heimschulen, or home schools, were created within Germany to train
youngsters in the techniques of explosives and sabotage as well as how to
live and act in foreign countries.
“In the spring of 1943, the curriculum of
these schools was changed slightly,” stated Curt Reiss. “This was logical,
for since the leaders of the Third Reich no longer expected to win this war,
they now began to put the accent on the work that would have to be done
after the war. Instead of developing spies and saboteurs, these schools were
put to the task of developing workers for the coming underground.”
In a move that has been duplicated within the modern U.S. intelligence
community, many SS members seemingly resigned from the Black Shirts but
secretly retained their loyalty and affiliation.
In today’s intelligence
parlance, this is called “sheep dipping.”
“These men will leave the SS for
good. Some of them will even leave the party, so as to be completely
neutralized. These latter may officially disavow the party before public
witnesses, who can be used later to testify how anti-Nazi they have been for
a long time,” wrote Reiss.
“Several intelligence services have commented on the sudden disappearance of
important personalities from [Germany’s] political and party life,” wrote
Reiss in 1944. “And it has become quite the accepted thing to everybody in
Germany. But what has not yet become known is that all this also applies to
a much greater number of anonymous persons all over Germany, those on the
second and third levels of the Nazi strata.
“These unknown personalities may be used later by the underground. Party
functionaries who may be known locally, but certainly not nationally, can
easily be transferred to another city or town, where they will suddenly
appear as anti-Nazis. The party helps in their masquerades. These men get
new documents which ‘prove’ that they have always been anti-Nazi.
Notes are
inserted in their personal files saying they must be watched on account of
their anti-Hitler attitudes and ‘unworthy’ behavior. Some of them will
undoubtedly be sent to concentration camps for crimes which they have never
committed, but which will make them look dependable in the eyes of the
Allies; some have perhaps already succeeded in joining anti-Nazi circles and
are pretending to conspire against Hitler.
Later on they will be able to use
such activities as alibis.”
Nazi sympathizers across the world were brought into the plan for
resurrecting National Socialism through the Auslandsorganisation (AO), or
the League of Germans Abroad.
Various forms of this organization had been in
existence since the 1800s and have manipulated thousands of persons in many
different countries.
In Czechoslovakia, Holland, Belgium, and Norway,
members aided the Nazi invasions, becoming known as “fifth columnists.”
“[T]he Nazis, long before they came to power, put their men or men they
trusted into these leagues. At a party meeting in Hamburg it was decided to
set up Nazi cells within all these organizations. That was in 1930. One year
later Rudolf Hess formed a special Foreign Department of the [Reich
Leadership] of the National Socialist Party, which established card files on
every member who lived abroad or traveled abroad. This was the basis of the
gigantic files which the AO was to organize later,” stated Reiss.
In 1944, Reiss pondered when the flight capital program might bear fruit.
“How long it will take for the Nazis to come back, to emerge on the
surface—if they succeed in their aims—is a question which cannot be answered
at all. Even under the most favorable circumstances—that is, most favorable
for them—it will take ten or fifteen years. Even then it would be a
blitzkrieg, an underground blitzkrieg with somewhat different conceptions
of time,” he wrote.
“The Italian underground needed a half century to
achieve its goal, the Irish a whole century, the Bonapartists thirty-five
years, and the Russian Socialists twenty-five. The Russians needed two
lost wars to bring about their revolution. The Nazis cannot wait for another
lost war. They want to come to power so that they can start World War III.”
Reiss, with his accumulated knowledge of the Nazis and their methods, issued
this warning in 1944:
It is not the relative strengths of the different powers that must change,
but the relations of the human beings within all the countries of this
world. Some call it revolution. Some call it a new order. Whatever we call
it, it must come about. If it does not, the Nazi underground will live and
flourish. In due time, it will make itself felt far beyond the borders of
Germany. It will certainly make itself felt in this country—and no ocean
will be broad enough to stop it.
For Nazism or Fascism is by no means an Italian or German specialty. It is
as international as murder, as greed for power, as injustice, as madness. In
our time these horrors were translated into political and cultural actuality
in Italy and in Germany first.
. . . If we don’t stamp out the Nazi underground, it will make itself felt
all over the world; in this country too. We may not have to wait ten years,
perhaps not even five.
For many years in the past we closed our eyes to the Nazi threat. We must
never allow ourselves to close them again. The danger to the world, to this
country will not diminish. But it is possible to fight this danger if we
know it, if we remain aware of its existence.
Armed with super-science and technology, plus the loot of Europe—to include
perhaps Solomon’s treasure—the Nazis and their ideology were well placed to
begin their Fourth Reich.
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