The CIA's worst-kept secret:
Newly declassified files confirm United States collaboration with Nazis
By Martin A. Lee
 
0105spy.pdf
"Honest and idealist ... enjoys good food and wine ... unprejudiced
mind ..."
That's how a 1952 Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) assessment described
Nazi ideologue Emil Augsburg, an officer at the infamous Wannsee Institute,
the SS think tank involved in planning the Final Solution. Augsburg's
SS unit performed "special duties," a euphemism for exterminating
Jews and other "undesirables" during the Second World War.
Although he was wanted in Poland for war crimes, Augsburg managed to
ingratiate himself with the U.S. CIA, which employed him in the late 1940s
as an expert on Soviet affairs. Recently released CIA records indicate
that Augsburg was among a rogue's gallery of Nazi war criminals recruited
by U.S. intelligence agencies shortly after Germany surrendered to the
Allies.
Pried loose by Congress, which passed the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure
Act three years ago, a long-hidden trove of once-classified CIA documents
confirms one of the worst-kept secrets of the cold war--the CIA's use
of an extensive Nazi spy network to wage a clandestine campaign against
the Soviet Union.
The CIA reports show that U.S. officials knew they were subsidizing numerous
Third Reich veterans who had committed horrible crimes against humanity,
but these atrocities were overlooked as the anti-Communist crusade acquired
its own momentum. For Nazis who would otherwise have been charged with
war crimes, signing on with American intelligence enabled them to avoid
a prison term.
"The real winners of the cold war were Nazi war criminals, many
of whom were able to escape justice because the East and West became so
rapidly focused after the war on challenging each other," says Eli
Rosenbaum, director of the Justice Department's Office of Special Investigations
and America's chief Nazi hunter. Rosenbaum serves on a Clinton-appointed
Interagency Working Group (IWG) committee of U.S. scholars, public officials,
and former intelligence officers who helped prepare the CIA records for
declassification.
Many Nazi criminals "received light punishment, no punishment at
all, or received compensation because Western spy agencies considered
them useful assets in the cold war," the IWG team stated after releasing
18,000 pages of redacted CIA material. (More installments are pending.)
These are "not just dry historical documents," insists former
congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman, a member of the panel examining the
CIA files. As far as Holtzman is concerned, the CIA papers raise critical
questions about American foreign policy and the origins of the cold war.
The decision to recruit Nazi operatives had a negative impact on U.S.-Soviet
relations and set the stage for Washington's tolerance of human rights
abuses and other criminal acts in the name of anti-Communism. With that
fateful sub-rosa embrace, the die was cast for a litany of antidemocratic
CIA interventions around the world.
The Gehlen Org
The key figure on the German side of the CIA-Nazi tryst was General Reinhard
Gehlen, who had served as Adolf Hitler's top anti-Soviet spy. During World
War II, Gehlen oversaw all German military-intelligence operations in
Eastern Europe and the USSR.
As the war drew to a close, Gehlen surmised that the U.S.-Soviet alliance
would soon break down. Realizing that the United States did not have a
viable cloak-and-dagger apparatus in Eastern Europe, Gehlen surrendered
to the Americans and pitched himself as someone who could make a vital
contribution to the forthcoming struggle against the Communists. In addition
to sharing his vast espionage archive on the USSR, Gehlen promised that
he could resurrect an underground network of battle-hardened, anti-Communist
assets who were well placed to wreak havoc throughout the Soviet Union
and Eastern Europe.
Although the Yalta Treaty stipulated that the United States must give
the Soviets all captured German officers who had been involved in "eastern
area activities," Gehlen was quickly spirited off to Fort Hunt in
Virginia. The image he projected during 10 months of negotiations at Fort
Hunt was, to use a bit of espionage parlance, a "legend"--one
that hinged on Gehlen's false claim that he was never really a Nazi, but
was dedicated, above all, to fighting Communism. Those who bit the bait
included future CIA director Allen Dulles, who became Gehlen's biggest
supporter among American policy wonks.
Gehlen returned to West Germany in the summer of 1946 with a mandate
to rebuild his espionage organization and resume spying on the East at
the behest of American intelligence. The date is significant as it preceded
the onset of the cold war, which, according to standard U.S. historical
accounts, did not begin until a year later. The early courtship of Gehlen
by American intelligence suggests that Washington was in a cold war mode
sooner than most people realize. The Gehlen gambit also belies the prevalent
Western notion that aggressive Soviet policies were primarily to blame
for triggering the cold war.
Based near Munich, Gehlen proceeded to enlist thousands of Gestapo, Wehrmacht,
and SS veterans. Even the vilest of the vile--the senior bureaucrats who
ran the central administrative apparatus of the Holocaust--were welcome
in the "Gehlen Org," as it was called--including Alois Brunner,
Adolf Eichmann's chief deputy. SS major Emil Augsburg and gestapo captain
Klaus Barbie, otherwise known as the "Butcher of Lyon," were
among those who did double duty for Gehlen and U.S. intelligence. "It
seems that in the Gehlen headquarters, one SS man paved the way for the
next and Himmler's elite were having happy reunion ceremonies," the
Frankfurter Rundschau reported in the early 1950s.
Bolted lock, stock, and barrel into the CIA, Gehlen's Nazi-infested spy
apparatus functioned as America's secret eyes and ears in central Europe.
The Org would go on to play a major role within NATO, supplying two-thirds
of raw intelligence on the Warsaw Pact countries. Under CIA auspices,
and later as head of the West German secret service until he retired in
1968, Gehlen exerted considerable influence on U.S. policy toward the
Soviet bloc. When U.S. spy chiefs desired an off-the-shelf style of nation
tampering, they turned to the readily available Org, which served as a
subcontracting syndicate for a series of ill-fated guerrilla air drops
behind the Iron Curtain and other harebrained CIA rollback schemes.
Sitting Ducks for Disinformation
It's long been known that top German scientists were eagerly scooped
up by several countries, including the United States, which rushed to
claim these high-profile experts as spoils of World War II. Yet all the
while the CIA was mum about recruiting Nazi spies. The U.S. government
never officially acknowledged its role in launching the Gehlen organization
until more than half a century after the fact.
Handling Nazi spies, however, was not the same as employing rocket technicians.
One could always tell whether Werner von Braun and his bunch were accomplishing
their assignments for NASA and other U.S. agencies. If the rockets didn't
fire properly, then the scientists would be judged accordingly. But how
does one determine if a Nazi spy with a dubious past is doing a reliable
job?
Third Reich veterans often proved adept at peddling data--much of it
false--in return for cash and safety, the IWG panel concluded. Many Nazis
played a double game, feeding scuttlebutt to both sides of the East-West
conflict and preying upon the mutual suspicions that emerged from the
rubble of Hitler's Germany.
General Gehlen frequently exaggerated the Soviet threat in order to exacerbate
tensions between the superpowers. At one point he succeeded in convincing
General Lucius Clay, military governor of the U.S. zone of occupation
in Germany, that a major Soviet war mobilization had begun in Eastern
Europe. This prompted Clay to dash off a frantic, top-secret telegram
to Washington in March 1948, warning that war "may come with dramatic
suddenness."
Gehlen's disinformation strategy was based on a simple premise: the colder
the cold war got, the more political space for Hitler's heirs to maneuver.
The Org could only flourish under cold war conditions; as an institution
it was therefore committed to perpetuating the Soviet-American conflict.
"The agency loved Gehlen because he fed us what we wanted to hear.
We used his stuff constantly, and we fed it to everyone else--the Pentagon,
the White House, the newspapers. They loved it, too. But it was hyped-up
Russian bogeyman junk, and it did a lot of damage to this country,"
a retired CIA official told author Christopher Simpson, who also serves
on the IGW review panel and was author of Blowback: America's Recruitment
of Nazis and Its Effects on the Cold War.
Unexpected Consequences
Members of the Gehlen Org were instrumental in helping thousands of fascist
fugitives escape via "ratlines" to safe havens abroad--often
with a wink and a nod from U.S. intelligence officers. Third Reich expatriates
and fascist collaborators subsequently emerged as "security advisors"
in several Middle Eastern and Latin American countries, where ultra-right-wing
death squads persist as their enduring legacy. Klaus Barbie, for example,
assisted a succession of military regimes in Bolivia, where he taught
soldiers torture techniques and helped protect the flourishing cocaine
trade in the late 1970s and early '80s.
CIA officials eventually learned that the Nazi old boy network nesting
inside the Gehlen Org had an unexpected twist to it. By bankrolling Gehlen,
the CIA unknowingly laid itself open to manipulation by a foreign intelligence
service that was riddled with Soviet spies. Gehlen's habit of employing
compromised ex-Nazis--and the CIA's willingness to sanction this practice--enabled
the USSR to penetrate West Germany's secret service by blackmailing numerous
agents.
Ironically, some of the men employed by Gehlen would go on to play leading
roles in European neofascist organizations that despise the United States.
One of the consequences of the CIA's ghoulish alliance with the Org is
evident today in a resurgent fascist movement in Europe that can trace
its ideological lineage back to Hitler's Reich, through Gehlen operatives,
who collaborated with U.S. intelligence.
Slow to recognize that their Nazi hired guns would feign an allegiance
to the Western alliance as long as they deemed it tactically advantageous,
CIA officials invested far too much in Gehlen's spooky Nazi outfit. "It
was a horrendous mistake, morally, politically, and also in very pragmatic
intelligence terms," says American University professor Richard Breitman,
chairman of the IWG review panel.
More than just a bungled spy caper, the Gehlen debacle should serve as
a cautionary tale at a time when post-cold war triumphalism and arrogant
unilateralism are rampant among U.S. officials. If nothing else, it underscores
the need for the United States to confront some of its own demons now
that unreconstructed cold warriors are again riding top saddle in Washington.
(Martin A. Lee <martin@sfbg.com>
is the author of The Beast Reawakens, a book on neofascism.)
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