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The Bormann Brotherhood: A New Investigation of the Escape and Survival of Nazi War Criminals
The Bormann Brotherhood A New Investigation of the Escape and Survival of Nazi War Criminals Author:William Stevenson While the flames of World War II still raged, Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin issued a warning to the Nazi leaders. Those responsible for the torture and murder of millions of innocent and defenseless civilians were promised that "...the three Allied Powers will pursue them to the furthest corners of the earth and deliver them to the... more »ir judges so that justice may be done."
That promise was not kept.
Justice has not been done.
In 1945, twelve of the most notorious Nazis were tried for crimes against humanity and sentenced to death by the International Military Tribunal convened at Nuremberg. (Martin Bormann, his whereabouts unknown, had been tried and convicted in absentia.) Subsequent war-crimes trials ended in the conviction of other offenders. But the majority of the torturers and murderers -- who, in one decade, and made this the bloodiest century in history -- have escaped, found sanctuary, and have continued to work effectively toward the concept of eventual world domination. Nazism did not die at Nuremburg.
Survival and resurgence is no mere accident. It is, in the main, the result of a brilliant complex plan for the creation of a "brotherhood" initiated long before the end of the war by the least visible and most powerful of Nazi war lords -- Martin Bormann. The Brotherhood, backed by virtually unlimited funds, established "safe" houses inside Germany, escape routes to other countries and continents, and extensive international groups of industrial firms as financial reservoirs and as "fronts" for escaped Nazis. The Brotherhood extends beyond known identification but has been revealed in certain named guises, the most familiar being ODESSA.
This chronicle, based upon independent investigation, including numerous exclusive interviews and the examination of recently declassified and revealing documents, casts a new light upon that most insidious man, Bormann, his strange role in the Third Reich, and his devastating influence, which cuts mercilessly into our present and threatens our future. This is essential reading, as fascinating as it is meaningful.« less