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Hitler in Argentina PDF

306 Pages·2017·24.57 MB·English
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The Hitler Escape Trilogy HITLER In ARGENTINA The Escape of Adolf Hitler and Martin Bormann from the Führerbunker as Told by Nazi Spy Don Angel Alcazar de Velasco… and more! IN A LETTER TO HARRY COOPER IN 1984 First released as “Escape from the Bunker” Revised January 2014 Edited by Harry Cooper Copyright 1984, 2006, 2010 and 2014 by Harry Cooper All rights reserved by the copyright holder Pertinent portions of this book may be used in reviews or quoted in scholarly papers without violation of copyright laws if the editor’s name, book title and contact web address are listed as the source. Cover art by David Dees at DDees.com Sharkhunters International P. O. Box 1539 Hernando, FL 34441 www.sharkhunters.com Revised 2014 This book has been given a major revision in early 2014. The main text is not revised. It remains verbatim – exactly as DON ANGEL ALCAZAR de VELASCO (158-1985) told us in his letter sent to us in the mid-1980’s. That is unchanged because the facts are unchanged – so what is revised? We have added some personal letters from DON ANGEL to Sharkhunters around that same time AND many previously classified files from various sources. DON ANGEL of course, got things started but recently other S.E.I.G. Agents have pulled classified files and sent them to us. This acronym is from Sharkhunters Eaglehunters Intelligence Group. S.E.I.G. Agent REMBRANDT pulled files for us from the Dutch Secret Service. S.E.I.G. Agent TAUCHER pulled files of the FBI, OSS and CIA from dusty corridors in the National Archives. Top of the group is S.E.I.G. Agent PIZZARRO who pulled countless files from many sources including some forgotten STASI files from the collapsed DDR. Enjoy this revised book with all the new solid proof that Adolf Hitler, Eva Braun, Martin Bormann and thousands of others of the collapsed Third Reich did not perish in the ashes of the ruined Germany but indeed, lived out their lives in safety and comfort in various South American countries, primarily in Argentina. Fähnrich! A Fähnrich is a midshipman, an officer in training. Contrary to popular propaganda, the German officer corps was held to an extremely high standard of honor as we see here in the Code of Conduct written by Vizeadmiral Lohmann, Commandant of the Naval Academy at Mürwick. ______________________________ “The following professional and lifetime rules are valid in war and peace. I give them to you; put them to good use.” 1. Be example setting in all situations of life, especially in critical hours. You must be an ideal for your soldiers. 2. Always assert the interior and exterior behavior of a soldier. The superior must be the best disciplined man if he demands each subordinate will obey him. 3. Keep your honor unblemished. It is lost when you tamper with it in thoughts, words and deeds. 4. Preserve your courage to the utmost truth. Stand by your words and actions. 5. Be open with your superior, but remain tactful. Observe the sharp border between ‘on-duty’ and ‘off-duty’. 6. Learn from ‘verbal corrections’; do not play the insulted. 7. Restrain your judgment on matters which you do not master. The right to critique is reserved for those who have proven that they can do it better. 8. Pay attention to your own posture and behavior on duty and off duty. Only he who masters the common forms of society possesses the image for an officer necessary for successes in presenting himself. 9. Keep your body under control. Strengthen it regularly and maintain it in action preparedness. Self-control and restraint are manly. Letting go of yourself is irresponsible. 10. Restrain yourself from excessive alcohol consumption. It is often the cause for derailments. 11. Do not incur debts. They diminish your joy of life and drive for action. 12. Take advantage of time in your youth to educate and further yourself. 13. Sharpen your mind through periodic intellectual work in all areas, especially in regards to your profession. Immerse yourself in matters of literature, culture and history. 14. Form your own personality on examples of great men. 15. Listen to experienced comrades. From listening and contemplating, you can draw great winners. 16. When you are entrusted with men, always remember how in the past you wanted to be treated in the same situation. 17. Have respect for your superior and subordinates. You protect yourself from troublesome circumstances. 18. Act with common sense and heart. Otherwise you run the danger of losing your authority. 19. Hold the honor feeling of your soldiers as sacred. 20. Avoid harsh language; usually the sign of insecurity. 21. Before giving orders, look very carefully at your people and try to identify the human beings in them. 22. Orders only make sense when they convince and are executable. 23. The language of orders must be plain and penetrate the heart. 24. Keep your crew tightly together. Help each other in effective camaraderie. 25. Often read the book by Sorge, ‘The Navy Officer as Leader and Teacher’. It will give you guidance in all questions regarding daily duties. 26. Preserve your belief in your citizens, the German mission and God. Your belief will give you energy for life, combat and victory. (Sent by Sharkhunters Member WALTER KERN (6345-2001), photo right as a young soldier during the ‘Battle of the Bulge’) EDITOR NOTE - When we can get our heads out of the wartime propaganda and more so out of the really intense post-war fiction, we see that the German officer corps was indeed, extremely honorable. On the next pages you will read what various people, military and otherwise, thought of the Sharkhunters book series. Explanation of Membership Numbers. You will note that a Member has two sections to his//her Membership Number. The first is their Member Number – in the case of WALTER KERN, it is #6345. The second number denotes the year is which they joined Sharkhunters and in his case, KERN joined in 2001. TABLE OF CONTENTS Escape from the Bunker FÄHNRICH: The making of a German officer FOREWARD: My friend, the Spy CREDITS: PART ONE: Waltzing Matilda PART TWO: Nazi Espionage PART THREE: Hitler’s Mistress PART FOUR: Escape from Germany PART FIVE: Bormann the Prophet PART SIX: Bormann’s Lessons PART SEVEN: Half Buried Hatreds AFTERWORD: Detailed proof IN THE BEGINNING HITLER’S ESTATE NUKE RESEARCH LAB BEAUTY and the BEAST FILES, LETTERS & History FOREWORD My Friend, the Spy Foreword by HARRY COOPER (1-LIFE-1983) In this book, we examine probably the biggest mystery of the 20th Century and beyond…..did Adolf Hitler commit suicide in the Führerbunker or not? The world demanded to know the fate of the three leaders of the Axis powers when the war ended. There was no doubt about the fate of Italian leader ‘Il Duce’ Benito Mussolini (below left). He and his mistress were caught by Italian communists, brutally butchered and their bodies hung by the heels in a gas station. The world also knew that Japanese war leader Hideki Tojo (below right) shot himself as the Americans closed in on him, but he failed in his suicide attempt. He was nursed back to health then tried, found guilty and hanged. But Hitler – only the Soviets were on the scene and they were sadly lacking in the sciences and refused to communicate with the West. So what did happen to Hitler? This book will tell you exactly what happened. Keep in mind that no one witnessed the alleged suicide of Adolf Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun-Hitler in the Führerbunker. The three men who told about the suicide claim that they heard shots but they did not witness any suicide – and their stories differed markedly in the description of vital details as you see here from the book “The Secret Alliance” written by S.E.I.G. Agent Michael Ivinheim. Ivinheim tells us: 1. Three SS officers entered Hitler's suite at the Reich Chancellery on the afternoon of 30 April 1945 and saw the bodies of Hitler and Eva Hitler. 2. The three officers all held the rank of SS-Sturmbannführer (Major). These persons were: (i) Otto Günsche, Hitler's SS adjutant. (ii) Heinz Linge, Hitler's valet. (iii) Erich Kempka, Hitler's driver and head of the motor pool. Günsche Linge Kempka 3. These three officers subsequently made statements which do not coincide in the following: (i) The time of the occurrence. (ii) Who was where at the time. (iii) How the suicide was discovered. (iv) Who entered the suite with whom. (v) The position of Hitler's body. (vi) The order in which the bodies were removed and by whom. 4. The source material appears in two books: (i) Heinz Linge: Bis zum Untergang, Wilhelm Goldmann Verlag, 1980 at p.284-288. (ii) Erich Kempka: Die letzten Tage mit Adolf Hitler, Deutsche Verlagsgesellschaft, Preussisch- Oldendorf, 1991 at p.89-96. (iii) In Kempka's book at p.311-313 is the statement made by Günsche in a letter to Kempka dated 1 July 1975, the year in which Kempka died. 5. In Kempka, p.93, there appears the sketch of the room in which the alleged suicides occurred. The room was rectangular, approximately 3 x 2.5 metres. Entering by the double doors from the ante-room, the visitor faced the long wall against which the sofa was located. There was an armchair either side of the sofa. Before the sofa was a table with a vase of flowers. These details are important for understanding the major discrepancy. It may be helpful to read the Conclusion at the foot of this article first and use the three statements to confirm what the Conclusion says. Some important areas of discrepancy between the accounts are highlighted in the primary account in block. Statement of Kempka. (The following is condensed from 4 pages of unimportant matter. Towards midday on 30 April 1945 I was in a little-damaged restroom in the subterranean garage. I had just come in from outside to oversee the change of shift. Half an hour later the phone rang. It was Günsche. He said he had to have 200 litres of petrol. He wanted it immediately at the entrance to the Führer-bunker. I had to stand the world on its head to get it. I said I would have to go to the underground fuel store at the Zoo for that amount, and suggested that he wait until 1700 hrs when the Russian artillery would be quieter. Günsche said he had to have it now and hung up. I ordered my assistants to syphon out what they could find in the vehicles in the garage bunker and hurried over the rubble to the Führerbunker to find out what was going on. I met Günsche in the annex to the situation room as he left the Führer-suite. I asked what was amiss and he said, "The Chief is dead!" Günsche gave me his story. He said that Bormann, Linge and he, Günsche, had heard the shot and rushed into the suite at once. The Chief had shot himself in the head with his pistol and had inclined forward over the table top. Eva Hitler had taken poison and lay at an angle against the

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The absurdity of this existence was illustrated by a little pantomime devised by Hitler to regiment our lives. His naked body was then dumped in a
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