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"We do believe there is some risk that our attempt to block an inquiry to the Poles could become public through a leak at the Justice Department," read the 1987 memo, written by the agency's chief of political and psychological staff. "This could bring about a difficult issue for us
-- not quite Klaus Barbie, but in that category." Barbie was the notorious "Butcher of Lyon" who worked for U.S. intelligence after the war; he was eventually convicted in France for his role in the Holocaust. The records that were used to write the report were made available under the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act of 1998, one of the most ambitious and exhaustive efforts by the government to expose its own secrets. The papers include correspondence, legal documents, clippings and medical records. They illuminate the activities and postwar whereabouts of some of the most high-profile alleged Nazi war criminals. One of the report's chapters deals with how the Americans used Gestapo officers, including Rudolf Mildner, after the war. Mildner oversaw security in Denmark in 1943 when most of the country's 8,000 Jews were ordered arrested and deported to Auschwitz
-- though they were rescued after Danish resistance leaders were tipped off. The Army detained Mildner, and saved him from landing in the hands of war crimes investigators, because his knowledge of communist subversion was considered useful. "The Army's willingness to use Gestapo officials against communists was more substantial or greater than what we had known, even if there are no cases as prominent or large as Klaus Barbie," Breitman said.
The records answer some questions about the U.S. and Eichmann, who played a major role in carrying out the Holocaust and escaped from Europe after the war. Eichmann was kidnapped in Argentina by Israeli intelligence agents in 1960 and spirited away to be prosecuted for his crimes. According to the report: "No American intelligence agency aided Eichmann's escape or simply allowed him to hide safely in Argentina." Nazi hunters and lawmakers have long raised questions about the U.S. government's involvement with war criminals during the Cold War. Indeed, such suspicions have been confirmed by scholars, journalists and investigators. Between 1945 and 1955 alone, more than 500 scientists and other specialists with Nazi ties were brought to the U.S., and went on to play major roles in such fields as missile development and the space program. ___ Online: National Archives: http://www.archives.gov/iwg/
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