RT.com
11 Apr 2025, 00:57 GMT+10
US agents hunted for the Nazi leader in South America for a decade after his supposed death, the documents show
The US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) conducted a secret search for Adolf Hitler in South America for a decade after his supposed death, according to declassified files.
The documents, dating from 1945 to 1955 and released by the CIA in recent years, were analyzed by the Washington Post this week. They show that field agents suspected Hitler may have escaped to South America under an alias, even though the agency had an autopsy report confirming his death.
According to MI5files, Hitler and his longtime companion Eva Braun, whom he had married the day before, killed themselves on April 30, 1945, in his Berlin bunker to avoid capture. Their partially burned bodies were later discovered by Soviet soldiers outside the Reich Chancellery. Yet CIA agents continued to chase leads into the mid-1950s.
One 1945filesaid US War Department agents told the FBI that a spa hotel in La Falda, Argentina, had been prepared as a potential hideout. The hotel's owners, who had donated to propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels, had close ties to Hitler. US intelligence believed they had made "all necessary" preparations to shelter Hitler after Germany's defeat in WWII.
Anotherdocumentfrom October 1955 included a photo of a man believed to be Hitler sitting with a friend in Colombia. The man, using the name Adolf Schrittelmayor, reportedly left Colombia for Argentina in January 1955.
The CIA briefly authorized an investigation into Schrittelmayor's background but later dropped it, noting that "enormous efforts could be expended on this matter with remote possibilities of establishing anything concrete."
No further CIA documents made public suggest that agents continued searching for Hitler after 1955, the WaPo reported.
The revelations come as Argentina - long known as a hideout for Nazi fugitives - prepares to declassify government documents related to those who found sanctuary there after WWII.
As many as 10,000 war criminals are believed to have used so-called 'ratlines' to escape Europe. Roughly half reportedly settled in Argentina, which was known for its reluctance to grant extradition requests.
Among them were Adolf Eichmann, a key architect of the Holocaust, and Josef Mengele, the notorious Auschwitz doctor. Eichmann was captured by Israeli agents in 1960 and taken to Israel for trial. Mengele evaded capture and died in Brazil in 1979 after suffering a heart attack while swimming.
(RT.com)
Get a daily dose of Rio De Janeiro Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Rio De Janeiro Sun.
More InformationDealers from the Americas attend the 2025 BYD Americas Dealer Conference in Shengzhou City, east China's Zhejiang Province, April 25,...
ABU DHABI, 28th April, 2025 (WAM) -- Elmer Schialer Salcedo, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Peru, emphasised that the...
ABU DHABI, 28th April, 2025 (WAM) -- Omar Obaid Al Hassan Al Shamsi, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, received a...
New Delhi [India], April 28 (ANI): India is moving towards becoming an USD 8 trillion economy by 2035, but it faces several big challenges...
This photo shows a Yangwang U7 of BYD at the 22nd Guangzhou International Automobile Exhibition at the China Import and Export Fair...
(250427) -- ASTANA, April 27, 2025 (Xinhua) -- An exhibitor from Venezuela introduces a book to a reader during the Eurasian Book Fair...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: This week, U.S. Supreme Court justices seemed open to letting fuel companies challenge California's strict vehicle...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The Trump administration announced this week that it will create a fast-track approval process for energy and mining...
JERUSALEM - More than 80 ambassadors and heads of mission from across the world were addressed by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: U.S. lawmakers are turning up the heat on China's biggest telecom firms, issuing subpoenas to compel their cooperation...
BRUSSELS, Belgium: European pharmaceutical companies are pushing for higher drug prices across the EU, warning that current pricing...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: A nuclear power plant in Michigan is hoping to become the first in the U.S. to restart after being permanently shut...