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What's the true story on South American Nazis?
30-Jan-2004
Dear Cecil:
What's the true story on South American Nazis? After World War II why would countries
like Argentina and Paraguay want them? --David Storms
Cecil replies:
Come now. After the war Argentina and Paraguay were run for years by nationalist
strongmen, Juan Peron and Alfredo Stroessner respectively, who liked to strut around in
military regalia and brutalize dissidents. Argentina had remained officially neutral until
early 1945, when economic pressure forced it to throw in with the Allies,
but until that
point was in intimate contact with Hitler's regime and the fascist Franco government in
Spain. Postwar Brazil was still fascist-friendly, a legacy of deposed dictator Getulio Vargas. Surely it's no surprise that the leaders of these countries nurtured
fraternal feelings for fleeing Nazis. I might also point out that not all fugitives from
the Third Reich ended up in South America--quite a few are said to have headed for Spain
or the Middle East, and the U.S. imported a crowd of Nazi rocket scientists during
Operation Paperclip. That said, the true story of how war criminals like Adolf Eichmann
and Josef Mengele wound up in the land of the gauchos has never been fully told, and even
now it's difficult to separate fact from fiction. Leading candidates for chief enabler of
the great escape include:
- Odessa. Part of the popular consciousness ever since Frederick Forsyth's
best-selling 1972 novel The Odessa File, this secret group (the name is an
acronym for Organization der ehemaligen SS-Angehörigen, "Organization of
Former SS Members") supposedly used stashed war booty and connections in high places
to spirit Nazi big shots out of reach of the Allies. Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal says he
first heard about Odessa during the Nuremberg trials, and in his 1989 book Justice,
Not Vengeance he seems convinced it exists, or rather existed. He offers little
evidence, though, and others have their doubts. Even some believers say the organization
was amateurish and short-lived.
- The Catholic church. The claim that members of the Catholic hierarchy were
instrumental in obtaining documents, cash, and safe passage for many escaping Nazis is
only barely scandalous these days. The benign view is that individual clerics acted out of
humanitarian concern, believing they were aiding refugees from postwar communist
persecution, and were unaware of their charges' sordid pasts. Others say the Vatican knew
quite well what was going on but wanted former Nazis as allies in its struggle against the
reds. A figure commonly named in this context is Alois Hudal, an openly pro-Nazi German
bishop in Rome who is said to have helped engineer the escapes of dozens if not hundreds
of Nazis--including Eichmann, who was living in Argentina when the Mossad caught him in
1960, and Franz Stangl, commandant of the Treblinka death camp, who ultimately made his
way to Brazil and was captured there in 1967.
- All of the above plus Peron. Argentine journalist Uki Goņi, in The Real
Odessa: Smuggling the Nazis to Peron's Argentina (2002), offers what amounts to a
synthesis of earlier theories. The "real Odessa," he says, consisted of about a
dozen energetic ex-Nazis and Nazi collaborators from several nations, including a few
wanted war criminals, working in concert with the Peron regime and sympathetic Catholic
officials in both Europe and Argentina. Goņi makes a plausible case that the cabal, which
was organized in Buenos Aires following Peron's election as Argentina's president in 1946,
orchestrated the emigration of hundreds, perhaps thousands of Nazis and other unsavory types to the country
in the late 1940s and early 1950s. (He also claims that the cabal was based at the
presidential palace, and that many of its members were given important jobs in Peron's
government.) The old Nazis made frequent trips to Europe to troll for more fugitives; some
war criminals had to be smuggled out, but in other cases countries were glad to unload
their troublesome Nazi refugees. Visas and landing permits were handed out freely, the
chief concern being that no communists or Jews be allowed in by mistake. How many ex-Nazis
made it to Argentina is not known. Goņi says he identified 300 during six years of
research, and it's easy to believe there were many more.
It's a lot to swallow, no question, and notwithstanding his 591 footnotes Goņi
concedes that many key Argentine records that would've corroborated his story have been
destroyed. Still, he avoids the overheated claims of other writers, and the plain fact is
that all those Nazis didn't wind up in South America by coincidence--they were going where
they were welcome. As for the details? Given the current worldwide consensus that Nazis
represent the ultimate human evil (and the resulting disinclination of officials in
Argentina and elsewhere to come clean), Goņi's book may be as close as we'll get to the
truth.
--CECIL ADAMS
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