http://english.ruvr.ru/2010/11/16/34729583.html

Voice of Russia
November 16, 2010

The USA – a “safe haven” for Nazis
Boris Volkhonsky 


“The New York Times” has obtained the full text of a report by the Justice 
Department’s Office of Special Investigations (OSI) which reveals astonishing 
facts about how US government agencies and most notably the Central 
Intelligence Agency created a “safe haven” for Nazis and their collaborators in 
the US.

The full text contains 600 pages and provides evidence about more than two 
dozen of the most notorious Nazi cases of the last thirty years.

Among the cases is, for example, the case of Otto Von Bolschwing, a former 
associate of one of the most notorious Nazi war criminals Adolf Eichmann, who 
masterminded and personally executed the plan “to purge Germany of the Jews”. 
Von Bolschwing, it has been revealed, helped Eichmann to develop the plan. 
After World War II he was granted access to the US and worked for the CIA. The 
report states that CIA officers were informed of Von Bolschwing’s Nazi past and 
even debated what should be done if Von Bolschwing were confronted about it — 
whether to deny any Nazi affiliation or “explain it away on the basis of 
extenuating circumstances.”

Another revealed case concerns Arthur L. Rudolph, a Nazi scientist who ran the 
Mittelwerk munitions factory. He was brought to the United States in 1945 for 
his rocket-making expertise under Operation Paperclip, an American program that 
recruited scientists who had worked in Nazi Germany. Later, Rudolph was highly 
honored by NASA and credited as the father of the Saturn V rocket.

The report says that Justice Department investigators found evidence that 
Rudolph was much more actively involved in exploiting slave laborers at 
Mittelwerk than he or American intelligence officials had acknowledged. 

And cases like this are numerous. The most striking fact is that overtly the US 
officials have for decades urged other countries to prosecute former Nazi war 
criminals, but, as it turns out, covertly were using them for various purposes 
citing the “national interests”. The report reveals that quite a number of 
Nazis were granted free access to the US and later used for intelligence and 
other purposes, although government officials were well informed of their past.

“America, which prided itself on being a safe haven for the persecuted, 
became...a safe haven for persecutors as well,” says the report.

The very fact that such an investigation was conducted by an office under the 
Justice Department is not surprising. It is hardly any secret that there exists 
deep mistrust and sharp rivalry between various law enforcement agencies, 
including the CIA and the Justice Department. Throwing a stone into the other’s 
domain is only too natural.

But then, why was the report kept secret for four years after it was initially 
compiled in 2006? And why, when sued by David Sobel, a Washington lawyer, and 
the National Security Archive under the Freedom of Information Act, the 
Department did provide Mr. Sobel with only a partial copy with more than 1,000 
passages and references deleted based on exemptions for privacy and internal 
deliberations?

One of the explanations is simple: the report cites several cases when the 
Justice Department officials were the ones who concealed the facts about the 
Nazi past of applicants for entry into the US.

But actually, the reason is much deeper. The report clearly shows the level of 
the overall American (without any distinction between agencies) complicity and 
deception in such operations.

And this brings us to the most vital question. It is universally acknowledged 
that the very notion of “human rights” is far above any political or other 
practical considerations. The US is trying hard to present itself as the 
leading proponent of human rights in the world. But the “NY Times” revelations 
show that when it comes to designing a nuclear warhead, or providing 
substantial intelligence data, or any other issue, much more earthly than the 
“human rights”, but bearing directly on the “national interests”, the very 
notion of “human rights” may easily be forgotten. The notorious “double 
standards” are once again at work.

What implications and consequences the whole case may have for the fate of 
Barack Obama who pledged to make his administration the most transparent one, 
is still to be seen. Probably, none – there are still two years to go before 
the next presidential elections.

But the fact that America’s image has once again been tarnished remains 
unquestionable.

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